I reject Blocher's thesis: "No questions may be asked!" of the Ems-Chemie boss a few weeks ago (in the documentary "Reporter" SF), I thought I was looking at a female Christoph Blocher. Magdalena Martullo speaks like her father, walks like her father and does not seem to tolerate any questions.
She leads in a military-like manner and switzerland rcs data with a firm hand. The sequences shown made it clear: the task is more important to her than anything else. The boss seems to keep the managers on a short leash. Leading means demanding. Demanding is probably played down too often these days. The reporter's report (SF) is edited in such a way that the Blocher daughter is portrayed as a boss who exposes her employees and has no idea about people-oriented leadership.
It is entirely conceivable, however, that the employees know exactly what the boss's tone means and even fully accept the successful manager as she is. As we all know, there is often a soft core inside a hard shell. It is therefore entirely conceivable that the camera could have filmed more sociable scenes.