After obtaining a doctorate in mathematics from Paris 6 University, I joined Finaref, partly by accident, but this was a real stroke of luck: they instilled a very strong project-based culture and a very strong demanding nature in me as a manager, irrespective of the fact that I’m a woman. And yet this was in 1999!
When Finaref was incorporated into the CA Group, this offered me new perspectives and I got involved in exciting projects around “data”, culminating in the creation of the CA Group’s DataLab, the aim of which was to create impetus around Big Data and AI in the entities. When this was finished, I decided to join LCL, which, in my opinion, is the best industrial laboratory for AI development within the Group: it’s one of the retail banking networks, but it is centralised, which gives it a critical mass for my role.
I report to the Deputy General Manager for Operations (known as the operations director at LCL) and I am a member of the company’s Circle of Executives: this enables me to steep myself in the company’s strategic challenges and to propose AI projects that are useful for my company.
My very atypical profile (often seen as very technical) has sometimes prevailed over the fact that I am female and sometimes “aggravated” behaviour around this fact, resulting in some individuals (male and female) using their power to sideline me. This will continue to happen and is reinforced in our Group by a criterion other than gender: traditionally, our Group supports individuals with “generalist” characteristics towards executive positions but struggles to support individuals regarded as “experts” in the same way, though many executives now recognise that these experts should also be irrigating the broad managerial strata. This is probably a point that will evolve significantly in future and it is important for our Group.