Joanna Carman’s leadership role at BT Group is complex, with overlapping responsibilities. She leads the Plusnet broadband brand, while also acting as its chief marketing officer. She also looks after home & TV propositions for EE and BT Consumer.
As a result, she manages and collaborates with many different teams. That could mean having lots of different leader personas. But her secret is that a leader’s true power lies in being authentic.
“In the beginning, I thought I had to emulate the behaviours of other leaders,” she says. The key to being an authentic leader, she believes, is turning up to work as an individual, not an emulation of what you think bosses should be like. This means a lack of pretence and much greater informality in simple things like clothing (she wears trainers and comfortable clothes) and interactions with people whatever their level in the business.
“Gen Z and below, coming into organisations, are demanding we treat them as individuals,” says Carman. It’s about attracting and retaining talent, as well as being comfortable in your own skin.
“It’s made me happier. There’s nothing more exhausting than coming to work and pretending to be something you’re not.”
Related and recommended
From Rolls-Royce to Marks & Spencer, these CEOs show how decisive leadership can transform Britain’s biggest companies
Rolls-Royce is one of the most famous names in British business, but its financial performance has rarely matched its reputation. Until now. Tufan Erginbilgiç is our CEO of the Year
Years of decline have hollowed out London’s listing market, but founders, banks and ministers are quietly pushing for a revival
Healthcare and income tax require radical reform, but the Budget revealed little ambition to tackle the big issues