With the beginning of the year, the corporate market is rearranging itself.
Here are the latest passes from the country's main companies:
José Bandín replaces Silvia Tenazinha at Banco Santander
José Bandín, new manager of Retail & Commercial Banking and Wealth Management & Insurance at Banco Santander.
Santander Argentina appointed
José Bandín
, who was senior manager of Corporate & Investment Banking (SCIB), as
senior manager of Retail & Commercial Banking (R&CB) and Wealth Management & Insurance,
replacing
Silvia Tenazinha
, who led the transformation of Commercial Banking from Santander for 5 years and who took over this month as general director of Salesforce Argentina.
Bandín will report globally to
Daniel Barriuso
(Retail & Commercial Banking) and
Victor Matarranz
for Wealth Management & Insurance, and locally he will continue as a member of the Management Committee reporting to
Alejandro Butti,
CEO of Santander Argentina.
The manager, who has worked at Santander for 35 years, is a public accountant, graduated from the Universidad Católica de la Plata, and also has a master's degree in Finance from the University of Belgrano.
Bandín will maintain his responsibilities as head of Santander Corporate & Investment Banking (SCIB) on an interim basis, until the appointment of a successor in that area.
MODO has a new Chief Technology Officer
Sebastián Rosenbolt was appointed Chief Technology Officer of MODO.
MODO, the virtual wallet in which more than 35 banks participate, appointed
Sebastián Rosenbolt
as
Chief Technology Officer.
The manager has more than 20 years of experience in the software industry, with a strong technical focus, including backend, frontend, mobile, BI, data and product.
Rosenbolt comes from working as Chief Technology Officer at ClicOH;
as Vice President of Engineering at Despegar, and as a developer on the teams of different companies such as Globant, Thomson Reuters and TECNA.
He is a Systems Engineer from the National Technological University (UTN) and is also a professor at the same institution for the subject of “Advanced Technologies in Software Construction”.
Marco Milesi will lead Gray in Buenos Aires
Marco Milesi and Diego Medvedocky, from Grey.
Marco Milesi
arrives in Buenos Aires as
CEO of Gray Argentina
and
Head of Borderless Operations.
The creative, who until now was CEO of Gray Latam, settles in the Argentine capital to lead the Grey's office after the departure of Denise Orman and to promote the global operations of Gray Borderless from the Buenos Aires Hub.
Milesi will lead alongside
Diego Medvedocky
, president of Gray Argentina, one of the emblematic creative agencies of the network.
In 2023,
it broke its historical record at Cannes Lions with eight lions
obtained and its local and regional business operations gained strength with projects for InBev in various parts of Latin America, Pernod Ricard, IKEA in Chile and Cola-Cola, among other large advertisers.
At the same time, Milesi will also hold the position of
Head of Borderless Operations,
a new global role whose goal will be to expand and consolidate the Buenos Aires office as the global operations center for Gray's Borderless modality to encourage this business model that offers attention to needs of network clients with cost efficiency and talent without borders, working remotely and agilely from any of the 33 Gray offices around the planet.
Changes in the Unipar leadership
Rodrigo Cannaval, CEO of Unipar.
Unipar, producer of chlorine, caustic soda and PVC, appointed
Rodrigo Cannaval
as
CEO
, who until now held the role of Industrial executive director in Brazil.
With this decision, the transition begins with the current CEO, also Brazilian Mauricio Russomanno, who ends his term in April.
With this new stage, one of the largest investment cycles in the history of the firm begins.
Graduated in Chemical Engineering from the University of São Paulo, he has a postgraduate degree in Production Engineering from the State University of São Paulo (UNESP) and an MBA in Marketing from the prestigious IBE-FGV Campinas business school.
The executive will have to lead projects already announced, such as the modernization of the chlorine and caustic soda production units in Argentina and Brazil.