Sandro Principe est nommé nouveau responsable général des clients commerciaux chez SMG Real Estate

20.08.2024

SMG Swiss Marketplace Group a le plaisir d’annoncer la nomination de Sandro Principe au poste de Director Business Customers et donc, de responsable général des clients commerciaux chez SMG Real Estate. Le secteur d’activité de SMG Real Estate comprend notamment ImmoScout24, Homegate et Flatfox. M. Principe succède à Marcel Meier, qui a développé et dirigé avec succès le secteur B2B pendant de nombreuses années. En septembre, il se concentrera sur ses études doctorales à Lyon et apportera temporairement son soutien à SMG Real Estate en tant que conseiller.

À partir du 1er novembre 2024, Sandro Principe occupera le poste de Director Business Customer au sein de SMG Real Estate pour les portails immobiliers ImmoScout24, Homegate, Flatfox, Immostreet.ch, alle-immobilien.ch, home.ch et Acheter-Louer.ch. Dans le cadre de cette fonction, il sera responsable de la direction stratégique du secteur des clients commerciaux, ainsi que de l’ensemble du secteur des ventes et du service client.

Spécialiste et dirigeant chevronné
Avec Sandro Principe, SMG Real Estate a pu recruter un expert reconnu et un dirigeant expérimenté. Sandro Principe est ainsi fort d’une longue expérience sur différents postes de direction dans les secteurs de l’immobilier et de l’informatique. Jusqu’à son arrivée chez SMG, il était membre de l’Executive Board de Yarowa SA, où il a notamment développé un cabinet international de gestion immobilière. Auparavant, il était Chief Transformation Officer chez Wincasa AG, où il était responsable de la numérisation de l’un des principaux prestataires de services immobiliers de Suisse. Parmi les autres entreprises pour lesquelles il a travaillé, nous pouvons citer Swisscom, SPS (anciennement Swiss Post Solutions) et Accenture. Il a également participé à la création de Lemonfrog, qui exploite au total 17 plateformes d’intermédiation pour des services d’assistance dans quatre pays. Sandro Principe est titulaire d’un doctorat en Business Administration de l’Université de Saint-Gall et a suivi entièrement des formations continues en Management Consulting et Agile Management.

Martin Waeber, Managing Director Real Estate chez SMG, se réjouit de cette future collaboration: « Avec Sandro Principe, nous avons pu recruter un expert chevronné du paysage immobilier et informatique suisse. Nous avons le plaisir de l’accueillir dans l’équipe.» Sandro Principe succède à Marcel Meier qui, après avoir travaillé avec succès pour SMG Real Estate, souhaite poursuivre sa carrière personnelle hors de l’entreprise. «Je remercie tout particulièrement Marcel Meier. Grâce à son engagement et à sa passion pour notre clientèle commerciale, il a largement contribué au succès de SMG Real Estate pendant plus de cinq ans. Je souhaite à Marcel beaucoup de succès pour ses futures études en France et au-delà», poursuit M. Waeber.

Sebastian Sinemus
Senior Communications Manager Real Estate & Media Spokesperson

[email protected]
+41 79 819 21 50

Marta Andreoni

Head of Design for Automotive

Introduce yourself and your role at SMG

I’m Marta Andreoni, Head of Design at SMG Automotive. I lead the design and UX writing team shaping AutoScout24 user experience. 

In my role, I wear many hats. My main focus is ensuring we stay true to our vision “simplifying people’s lives and connecting humans through innovative digital platforms” and our brand promise, “make it happen”. I challenge my team to think user-first, push for innovation, ease of use for our customers and make forward-thinking decisions, even within business and technological constraints.

 A big part of my role is supporting each designer’s growth, motivation, and career development. Through one-on-one coaching, mentoring, group work, and projects, I help my colleagues set and achieve their goals while fostering new learning opportunities.

What helps you feel empowered and confident in your role?

If I had to mention one thing I would say “being proactive” has been key to feeling more empowered. I enjoy solving problems, so when issues or opportunities arise, be it in the product, market or the team, I get curious and I proactively investigate the reasons and try to bring inputs to be discussed with others, this makes me feel I can be part of the process or solution and my point of view is going to be taken seriously. My optimism also plays a role, giving me confidence that even the most complex challenges can be solved. 

Besides, having trust from other managers and colleagues makes me feel in a safe environment where I can take ownership on topics I’m passionate about. 

What’s one thing SMG does well in fostering an inclusive workplace? What more can be done to amplify and support different perspectives in the workplace?

In my experience, we strive for balancing top-down and bottom-up inputs, ensuring employees can influence product directions, processes, and culture. People are approachable, and our strong feedback culture helps voices be heard. Across SMG, initiatives like regular People & Culture Surveys, topic guilds, and events in our locations across the world foster open exchange and mutual learning.

That said, I’ve noticed that quieter voices sometimes get less space, or interacting with top management can feel intimidating, especially when giving critical feedback. To make participation more inclusive, we could apply more facilitation and group work techniques like structured turn-taking, written input, and smaller group discussions – ensuring everyone, regardless of confidence level, seniority or personality, feels comfortable contributing. 

Design is often about seeing the world differently. How do unique perspectives contribute to more innovative, inclusive, or impactful design?

Design is about understanding diverse user personas and perspectives to create solutions that truly meet their needs or create new opportunities. I believe in the power of collaboration to shape user experiences – bringing together different disciplines, backgrounds, and lived experiences helps challenge assumptions, uncover blind spots, and drive more inclusive, innovative, and impactful solutions.

Looking back on your career, what’s one lesson or piece of advice you wish you had known earlier as a leader in design?

There are three things no one really prepares you for as a design leader: dealing with constant change, facing failure and handling emotions at work. These topics aren’t talked about much until you face them. I was lucky to learn from others’ experiences, but much of it came through my own.

One thing I wish I had understood earlier is the power of emotional intelligence, my job is no longer about the content and the design, it is about people. Self-awareness, not just of your own emotions, but also how others feel and react, can be the difference between conflict and harmony, frustration and clarity. The more I grow as a leader and designer, the more I realise that design isn’t just about doing the design job, delivering solutions on the market: it’s about navigating people, their emotions, and making change more acceptable and transforming issues into opportunities, both within the organisation and through great products.

 

Photos de la Direction avec et sans couleur de fond en fichier ZIP

Logo à télécharger dans toutes les versions