We live in a paradoxical time: leaders have never been more exposed, nor have they ever felt so alone. In a hyper-connected society, where every gesture is amplified and every word is interpreted, the figure of the manager lives in a permanent tension between the need to show off and the risk of being judged.
Public exposure, once reserved for specific or institutional moments, has become a continuous exercise. Leaders are expected to have strategic vision, but also emotional authenticity. They are the visible reference points of their organisations and, at the same time, the repository of the expectations - and often the frustrations - of many.
In Spain we see this clearly. Ana Botín combines financial leadership and social commitment at the helm of Banco Santander, embodying the role of the purpose-driven global executive. Marta Ortegafrom Inditex, represents the strength of discretion and the value of coherence between identity and action. Juan RoigMercadona's president, has made direct and transparent communication his best reputation card. Marc Murtraat the head of Telefónica, and José BogasAt Endesa, they take on the visibility of strategic sectors undergoing constant transformation.
All face the same dilemma: how to communicate transparently without losing balance and focus. Behind this public role there is a silent reality. A loneliness that has nothing to do with the absence of people around, but with the difficulty of sharing the doubts, fears or contradictions that accompany decision-making.
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