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== Overview ==
== Overview ==
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
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| honorific_suffix =
| honorific_suffix =
| image = olivier-roussat.jpg
| image = olivier-roussat.jpg
| caption =
| caption = Olivier Roussat in 2023
| birth_date = 1964
| birth_date = 1964
| birth_place = [[Moulins]], France
| birth_place = Moulins, Auvergne, France
| citizenship = French
| citizenship = French
| education = [[Diplôme d'ingénieur]]
| education = Electrical engineering
| alma_mater = [[INSA Lyon]]
| alma_mater = National Institute of Applied Sciences of Lyon (INSA Lyon)
| occupation = Business executive
| occupation = [[Chief executive officer]]
| employer = [[Bouygues]]
| employer = [[Bouygues]]
| title = [[Chief Executive Officer]]
| title = Chief Executive Officer
| term = 2021–present
| term = 2021–present
| predecessor = [[Martin Bouygues]]
| predecessor = Martin Bouygues
| successor =
| successor =
| boards = [[TF1]], [[Bouygues Telecom]], [[Colas Group|Colas]], [[Equans]]
| boards = [[Bouygues]], [[Bouygues Telecom]], [[TF1 Group]], [[Colas Group]], [[Equans]], [[Capgemini]]
| known_for = Turnaround of Bouygues Telecom; Acquisition of Equans
| known_for = Leading [[Bouygues]] and [[Bouygues Telecom]] through restructuring and the Equans acquisition
| spouse = Florence Roussat
| spouse = Florence
| children = Yes
| children =
| awards =
| awards =
| signature =
| signature =
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}}
}}


👔 '''Olivier Roussat''' (born 1964) is a French engineer and business executive who has served as chief executive officer (CEO) of [[Bouygues]] since February 2021, becoming the first non-family member to lead the diversified construction, media and telecoms group.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers">{{cite web |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/en/summer-reads/article/2022/07/17/martin-and-olivier-the-brothers-in-arms-leading-the-bouygues-empire_5990449_183.html |title=Martin and Olivier: The brothers in arms leading the Bouygues empire |publisher=Le Monde |date=17 July 2022 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Rising from modest provincial origins, he built his career inside [[Bouygues Telecom]], steering the mobile operator through France's bruising price war of the 2010s before becoming Martin Bouygues' deputy and ultimately succeeding him as group CEO.<ref name="ChallengesCheville">{{cite web |url=https://www.challenges.fr/entreprise/telecoms/comment-olivier-roussat-est-devenu-la-cheville-ouvriere-du-groupe-bouygues_617322 |title=Comment Olivier Roussat est devenu la cheville ouvrière du groupe Bouygues |publisher=Challenges |date=7 October 2018 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> As chief executive, he has focused on strengthening Bouygues' core construction and telecom activities while expanding into energy and services through the acquisition of [[Equans]].<ref name="MGEInterview">{{cite web |url=https://www.mondedesgrandesecoles.fr/groupe-bouygues-rejoignez-une-aventure-humaine-linterview-dolivier-roussat/ |title=Groupe Bouygues : Rejoignez une aventure humaine ! – L’interview d’Olivier Roussat |publisher=Monde des Grandes Écoles et Universités |date=2 February 2023 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>
🏢 '''Corporate stewardship.''' Olivier Roussat (born 1964) is a French business executive and the current [[Chief Executive Officer]] of the [[Bouygues]] group, a diversified industrial conglomerate listed on the [[CAC 40]]. An engineer by training, Roussat spent the majority of his career within the group's telecommunications subsidiary, [[Bouygues Telecom]], where he orchestrated a significant restructuring and recovery following the destabilization of the French mobile market in 2012. In 2021, he became the first individual outside the founding Bouygues family to hold the position of Group CEO, succeeding [[Martin Bouygues]]. His tenure has been characterized by a strategic pivot toward energy and services, notably through the €7.1 billion acquisition of [[Equans]].

🧱 '''Operational linchpin of Bouygues.''' Within the Bouygues group, Roussat is widely regarded as "la cheville ouvrière" – the operational linchpin – responsible for translating the founding family's long-term vision into concrete projects across six business lines, from road building to television and mobile networks.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> Combining an engineer's appetite for detail with a low-profile public persona, he has become known for rapid decision-making, hands-on involvement in technical matters and a management style that emphasises trust, loyalty and human relationships.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /><ref name="MGEInterview" />


== Early life and education ==
== Early life and education ==
🚜 '''Provincial roots.''' Born in the rural commune of Moulins in the Auvergne region of central France, Roussat was raised in a modest household removed from the Parisian business elite. His mother worked as a nursing aide at a religious hospice, while his father operated a small trucking business.<ref name="ChallengesProfile">{{cite web |url=https://www.challenges.fr/entreprise/telecoms/comment-olivier-roussat-est-devenu-la-cheville-ouvriere-du-groupe-bouygues_617322 |title=Olivier Roussat, la cheville ouvrière du groupe Bouygues |publisher=[[Challenges]] |date=2018-10-07 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> From age 13, he engaged in manual labor to earn pocket money, performing tasks such as selling produce at markets, mowing roadsides, and loading cattle for his father's transport operations. These formative experiences in the French provinces instilled a pragmatism and work ethic often described by associates as a "bon sens du terroir" (common sense of the land).<ref name="ChallengesProfile" />


🏡 '''Modest family background.''' Born in 1964 in the rural town of Moulins in central France, Roussat grew up far from the Parisian elite; his mother worked as a nursing aide in a religious hospice and his father ran a small trucking business.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> From the age of 13 he took on a succession of small jobs – selling produce at local markets, mowing verges as a municipal worker and helping to load cattle onto his father's lorries – more to earn pocket money and learn the value of work than out of financial necessity, cultivating what he later described as a pragmatic "bon sens du terroir".<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />
🎓 '''Academic formation.''' Demonstrating early academic aptitude, Roussat secured admission to the [[INSA Lyon]] (National Institute of Applied Sciences), a selective engineering school recognized for fostering social mobility among students from non-elite backgrounds.<ref name="MondeGrandesEcoles">{{cite web |url=https://www.mondedesgrandesecoles.fr/groupe-bouygues-rejoignez-une-aventure-humaine-linterview-dolivier-roussat/ |title=Groupe Bouygues : Rejoignez une aventure humaine ! - L’interview d’Olivier Roussat |publisher=Monde des Grandes Écoles |date=2023-02-02 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> He specialized in electrical engineering, a discipline he later recalled as requiring the most rigorous effort within the curriculum. During his studies, he also engaged with humanities projects, including research on the ethics of prenatal surgery, suggesting an early interest in the intersection of technical systems and human values. He graduated with an engineering degree in 1987.<ref name="TF1Bio">{{cite web |url=https://groupe-tf1.fr/en/olivier-roussat |title=Olivier Roussat – Biography |publisher=[[TF1 Group]] |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>

🎓 '''Engineering studies at INSA Lyon.''' Academically strong, Roussat was admitted to the National Institute of Applied Sciences in Lyon (INSA Lyon), a public engineering school often described in France as a "social elevator" for talented students from non-elite backgrounds.<ref name="MGEInterview" /> He chose electrical engineering, which he has described as the field "where we worked the hardest", and thrived in an environment that combined rigorous technical training with a broad humanities curriculum and strong student camaraderie.<ref name="MGEInterview" /> During his studies he worked on a project examining the ethics of prenatal surgery, an experience he later cited as an early prompt to consider the human consequences of technological decisions alongside their technical feasibility.<ref name="MGEInterview" />

🧪 '''First steps in industry.''' After graduating from INSA Lyon in 1987 with an engineering degree, Roussat joined [[IBM]] France in 1988, beginning a fast-rising early career in information technology and corporate systems.<ref name="TF1Bio">{{cite web |url=https://groupe-tf1.fr/en/olivier-roussat |title=Olivier Roussat – Biography |publisher=TF1 Group |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> By his early thirties he was moving quickly up the hierarchy, but in April 1995 he resigned abruptly after what he saw as the unjust treatment of a finance controller colleague, Florence, who would later become his wife, a decision that would redirect his career toward the Bouygues group.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />


== Career ==
== Career ==
=== Early career and IBM ===
💾 '''Professional beginnings.''' Following his graduation, Roussat began his professional life in 1988 at [[IBM]] France. He advanced quickly through the ranks of the American technology giant over a seven-year period. However, his tenure at IBM ended abruptly in April 1995 due to a matter of personal principle. Roussat resigned after witnessing what he considered the unjust treatment of a colleague, a finance controller named Florence, who would later become his wife.<ref name="ChallengesProfile" /> Seeking a new direction, he left the established multinational structure to join the fledgling mobile operator [[Bouygues Telecom]], which had launched only a year prior. Joining as employee number 265, he began working under the mentorship of Philippe Montagner, a veteran construction manager who instructed him in contract rigor and risk management.<ref name="ChallengesProfile" />


=== Rise at Bouygues Telecom ===
=== Bouygues Telecom ===
📱 '''Operational ascent.''' Roussat established himself within the technical operations of Bouygues Telecom during the late 1990s, where he was responsible for setting up the network management center and streamlining IT processes.<ref name="TF1Bio" /> His decision-making speed earned him the internal nickname "Lucky Luke," after the comic book cowboy known for shooting faster than his shadow; colleagues noted his ability to conduct job interviews and extend offers within fifteen minutes.<ref name="ChallengesProfile" /> By 2003, he was appointed Director of Networks and joined the executive committee. His ability to blend deep technical knowledge—demonstrated by his habit of personally disassembling gadgets—with operational agility led to his promotion to [[Chief Executive Officer]] of Bouygues Telecom in 2007 at the age of 42.<ref name="ChallengesProfile" />


📶 '''Joining Bouygues Telecom.''' Leaving the relative security of [[IBM]] for a fledgling mobile operator, Roussat joined [[Bouygues Telecom]] in 1995, about a year after the subsidiary's creation, becoming employee number 265 in what was then a start-up within the Bouygues conglomerate.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> His first boss, Bouygues veteran Philippe Montagner, introduced him to the group's culture and trained him in managing large-scale projects, contractual risk and capital-intensive infrastructure, shaping the risk-aware mindset that would characterise his later leadership.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />
📉 '''Turnaround strategy.''' Roussat's leadership was severely tested in 2012 following the market entry of [[Free Mobile]], a low-cost competitor that initiated an aggressive price war. As Bouygues Telecom's revenue dropped by 9%, the unit faced an existential threat.<ref name="ChallengesCEO">{{cite web |url=https://www.challenges.fr/entreprise/tech-numerique/olivier-roussat-devient-pdg-de-bouygues-telecom_10182 |title=Olivier Roussat devient PDG de Bouygues Telecom |publisher=[[Challenges]] |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Roussat oversaw a radical restructuring plan involving the elimination of approximately 2,000 jobs—one in five positions—largely through voluntary departures. He personally fielded questions from employees during this period, a stressful task that reportedly caused him physical health issues.<ref name="ChallengesProfile" /> Simultaneously, he pivoted the company's strategy toward aggressive pricing and the rapid deployment of [[4G]] networks. By 2015, the operator had returned to profitability, with industry peers crediting Roussat as the architect of its survival.<ref name="ChallengesProfile" />


🛰 '''Building networks and operations.''' During the second half of the 1990s and early 2000s, Roussat held a series of technical and operational roles at [[Bouygues Telecom]], where he helped establish the company's first network management centre and rationalised its information systems to support nationwide mobile coverage.<ref name="TF1Bio" /> He earned a reputation for quick, unpretentious decision-making and for personally dismantling electronic devices to understand how they worked, traits that led colleagues to nickname him "Lucky Luke", after the comic-strip gunslinger reputed to shoot faster than his own shadow.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />
=== Group leadership ===
🏗️ '''Conglomerate leadership.''' Having solidified the telecom business, Roussat was appointed Deputy CEO of the wider Bouygues group in 2016, positioning him as the second-in-command to Martin Bouygues. He undertook an intensive period of immersion in the group's construction and media arms, visiting sites ranging from tunnel excavations in [[Hong Kong]] to roadworks in [[Madagascar]].<ref name="ChallengesProfile" /> In February 2021, Martin Bouygues separated the roles of Chairman and CEO, promoting Roussat to [[Chief Executive Officer]] of Bouygues SA. This appointment marked a historic shift, as Roussat became the first CEO in the company's 70-year history not to bear the Bouygues family name.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers">{{cite web |url=https://www.lemonde.fr/en/summer-reads/article/2022/07/17/martin-and-olivier-the-brothers-in-arms-leading-the-bouygues-empire_5990449_183.html |title=Martin and Olivier: The brothers in arms leading the Bouygues empire |publisher=[[Le Monde]] |date=2022-07-17 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>


📱 '''Chief executive of Bouygues Telecom.''' In 2007, at the age of 42, Roussat was appointed chief executive officer of [[Bouygues Telecom]], then France's third-largest mobile operator, in succession to Montagner.<ref name="ChallengesPDGTelecom">{{cite web |url=https://www.challenges.fr/entreprise/tech-numerique/olivier-roussat-devient-pdg-de-bouygues-telecom_10182 |title=Olivier Roussat devient PDG de Bouygues Telecom |publisher=Challenges |date=13 November 2007 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref><ref name="TF1Bio" /> His promotion reflected the confidence of Bouygues patriarch Martin Bouygues, who saw in Roussat a loyal engineer capable of steering the telecom subsidiary through intensifying competition and new technology cycles in 3G and 4G mobile networks.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />
⚡ '''Strategic expansion.''' As Group CEO, Roussat has focused on diversifying the conglomerate beyond its traditional construction roots. In 2022, he led the acquisition of [[Equans]], an energy services division spun off from [[Engie]], for €7.1 billion. This deal represented the largest acquisition in Bouygues' history and shifted the group's gravity toward energy efficiency and industrial services.<ref name="MondeGrandesEcoles" /> Roussat personally managed the post-merger integration, visiting sites to align the new workforce with Bouygues' culture. Concurrently, he maintained oversight of the telecom division, notably coordinating technical 5G discussions directly with suppliers like [[Huawei]].<ref name="ChallengesProfile" /> Under his tenure, group revenue reached €44.3 billion in 2023, with the stock price outperforming the broader Paris market.<ref name="CryptoBouygues">{{cite web |url=https://cryptonaute.fr/acheter-actions/bouygues/ |title=Acheter l'action Bouygues : Comment investir en 2025 |publisher=Cryptonaute |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>

⚔️ '''Free Mobile price war and restructuring.''' Roussat's tenure at [[Bouygues Telecom]] was defined by the disruptive entry of Free Mobile into the French market in 2012, which launched a low-cost offer that sparked a severe price war and led to a sharp fall in revenue across the sector; Bouygues Telecom recorded a 9% drop in sales in 2012 and was viewed as the hardest-hit operator in the shake-up.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /><ref name="ChallengesPDGTelecom" /> In response, he oversaw a painful restructuring that included the first large-scale staff reduction in Bouygues' history, eliminating around 2,000 of 9,000 jobs through a voluntary redundancy plan, and personally addressed employees in the company's auditorium to explain the strategy and answer questions, an episode he later acknowledged as one of the most stressful periods of his career.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />

🔄 '''Strategic repositioning and recovery.''' Alongside the cost-cutting, Roussat led a commercial and technological repositioning of [[Bouygues Telecom]], cutting prices, accelerating the rollout of 4G networks ahead of rivals and launching new offers designed to retain and win back customers.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> The company returned to profitability by the mid-2010s and was widely considered to have been saved from the worst effects of the price war; Nicolas Guérin, general counsel of competitor [[Orange S.A.|Orange]], later remarked that Roussat was "one of those who saved Bouygues Telecom".<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> During the same period, he participated in several rounds of attempted consolidation in the French mobile market, including exploratory talks with [[SFR]], [[Orange S.A.|Orange]] and [[Free (ISP)|Free]], none of which ultimately resulted in a merger but which reinforced his reputation as a tough but pragmatic negotiator.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />

=== Group leadership at Bouygues ===

🏗 '''Deputy CEO of the Bouygues group.''' In 2016, after nearly two decades in telecoms, Roussat was appointed deputy chief executive of [[Bouygues]] SA, moving from the operating subsidiary to the group's Paris headquarters and becoming Martin Bouygues' principal operational lieutenant.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> He described this period as that of a "patron en formation" – a CEO in training – devoting considerable time to learning the group's construction and infrastructure businesses through site visits to projects such as tunnels in Hong Kong, casinos in Macao and roadworks in Madagascar, and filling his office shelves with hard hats, models of machinery and photographs from the field.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />

🧭 '''Appointment as group chief executive.''' In February 2021 Martin Bouygues, approaching 70, stepped back from day-to-day management and the board appointed Roussat as chief executive officer of [[Bouygues]] SA, while Bouygues himself remained chairman.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" /> The move made Roussat the first non-family CEO in the group's seven-decade history and placed him at the centre of a generational transition in which he was expected both to run the diversified conglomerate and to help prepare Martin Bouygues' son Edward and other family members for future leadership roles.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" />

🔌 '''Equans acquisition and diversification.''' Early in his tenure as group CEO, Roussat led Bouygues' €7.1 billion acquisition of Equans, an energy and services business carved out of Engie, in a transaction completed in 2022 that made Equans the group's largest business segment by revenue.<ref name="MGEInterview" /> Presenting the deal as "historic", he argued that multi-technical services for energy efficiency and infrastructure would be central to the energy transition and provide a new growth engine for [[Bouygues]].<ref name="MGEInterview" /> Following the acquisition, he spent much of 2023 visiting Equans sites and meeting employees, emphasising integration into the wider group while seeking operational synergies.<ref name="MGEInterview" />

📡 '''Continuing influence in telecoms.''' Despite his wider responsibilities, Roussat has maintained a close involvement in [[Bouygues Telecom]], continuing to attend weekly executive meetings and keeping what industry peers describe as a strong hand on key decisions regarding investment and technology.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> Under his leadership, the operator has invested heavily in 5G networks and explored partnerships with equipment suppliers such as Huawei; accounts of an extended technical discussion he held with Huawei engineers in China are often cited internally to illustrate his continuing interest in the engineering aspects of telecom infrastructure.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />

💹 '''Financial performance under his tenure.''' Bouygues' financial results recovered strongly in the early years of Roussat's tenure as group CEO, with revenues rising by around 18% between 2021 and 2023 to reach approximately €44.3 billion, supported both by organic growth and the consolidation of Equans.<ref name="CryptonauteBouygues">{{cite web |url=https://cryptonaute.fr/acheter-actions/bouygues/ |title=Acheter l'action Bouygues : Comment investir en 2025 |publisher=Cryptonaute |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Over 2023 the group's share price gained about 45% on the Paris market, outpacing the broader indices and signalling investor approval of the strategy pursued under his leadership.<ref name="TradingEconomicsENFP">{{cite web |url=https://tradingeconomics.com/en:fp |title=Bouygues SA – Stock Price |publisher=Trading Economics |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Analysts have increasingly compared Bouygues with specialist rivals such as [[Vinci SA|Vinci]] and [[Eiffage]] in construction and with [[Orange S.A.|Orange]] and [[Altice Europe|SFR]] in telecoms when assessing the group's performance.<ref name="CryptonauteBouygues" />

== Compensation, shareholding and board roles ==

💶 '''Executive remuneration.''' As CEO of a [[CAC 40]] company, Roussat receives a remuneration package that is substantial by French standards but close to the median among large listed groups. In the most recently disclosed year, his total compensation amounted to about €5.4 million, including a fixed salary of €1.5 million with the remainder composed of annual bonuses and long-term share-based incentives tied to performance criteria.<ref name="SimplyWallStMgmt">{{cite web |url=https://simplywall.st/fr/stocks/fr/capital-goods/epa-en/bouygues-shares/management |title=Bouygues SA (EN) – Analyse de l'équipe de direction et de gestion |publisher=Simply Wall St |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> His pay levels reflect Bouygues' policy of moderating executive remuneration compared with some French luxury and technology groups whose CEOs receive much higher packages.<ref name="SimplyWallStMgmt" />

📊 '''Share ownership and wealth.''' Over several decades at [[Bouygues]], Roussat has accumulated a personal shareholding of roughly 0.02% of the group's capital, a stake valued at around €3.6 million at recent market prices, alongside pension rights and other assets built up over his career.<ref name="SimplyWallStMgmt" /> While these holdings make him a multi-millionaire, his personal wealth remains modest in comparison with that of the Bouygues founding family, whose aggregate fortune has been estimated in the billions of euros.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" />

🏛 '''Directorships within and beyond Bouygues.''' In addition to his role as group CEO, Roussat holds several board mandates within the Bouygues ecosystem. He has served as a director of [[TF1 Group]] and as a board member or chair of key subsidiaries including [[Bouygues Telecom]], [[Colas Group|Colas]], Bouygues Construction and [[Equans]], allowing him to remain closely involved in operational decisions across the group's business segments.<ref name="TF1Bio" /> Between 2021 and 2023 he was also an independent director of [[Capgemini]], bringing his technological and telecoms experience to the IT services group's board before stepping down to avoid overextension once his responsibilities at Bouygues intensified.<ref name="TF1Bio" />

== Personal life and interests ==

🕊 '''Discreet public profile.''' Despite leading a large listed group, Roussat is known for his discretion and reluctance to seek media attention, preferring to let results speak for themselves and rarely giving high-profile interviews outside earnings calls or specific project announcements.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> Associates describe him as neither shy nor aloof but rather as someone who avoids the Paris social circuit and high-society events, in keeping with his modest origins and emphasis on professional substance over personal visibility.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" />

👨‍👩‍👧 '''Family and attachment to his roots.''' Roussat is married to Florence, the former [[IBM]] finance controller whose treatment by management prompted his departure from the company in 1995, and the couple have children whose lives they keep out of the public eye.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> He has stated that family time is "capital" for him and is known to reserve his weekends as far as possible for his wife and children, while making regular trips – roughly once a month – back to his native Allier region to visit his mother, see old friends and spend time at a farmhouse that serves as a rural retreat.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" />

🍷 '''Tastes and pastimes.''' Colleagues depict Roussat as enjoying simple but convivial pleasures, such as inviting teams to celebrate milestones over plates of Iberian ham and glasses of red wine in a favourite Bellota-Bellota cellar near the Boulogne headquarters.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> He has developed an unusual passion for hand-woven silk and wool carpets after discovering Persian and Caucasian rugs through his younger brother's work on Bouygues projects in Azerbaijan, and has accumulated a small collection that decorates his office and home.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> Although he occasionally joins hunting weekends in the Sologne forests with Martin Bouygues and other executives, accounts suggest he is as interested in conversation around the lodge fireplace as in the pursuit of game.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" />

📚 '''Reading, travel and everyday habits.''' Away from work, Roussat is reported to enjoy reading, particularly history and non-fiction, and travelling with his family to discover new cultures, often returning from trips with another rug rolled under his arm.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> In daily life he favours well-cut but understated Italian suits worn with open-collar shirts, reinforcing an image of understated neatness rather than ostentation, and he is said to maintain a certain distance by sharing his mobile phone number sparingly, not out of arrogance but to draw boundaries between professional obligations and private space.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />

== Management style and reputation ==

🤝 '''Trust-based, decentralised leadership.''' Accounts from colleagues underline that Roussat's management style centres on trust and delegation: he has stated explicitly that he prefers to give his trust "a priori" as the foundation of a decentralised organisation, granting substantial autonomy to managers while expecting them to act responsibly.<ref name="MGEInterview" /> Former Bouygues Telecom deputy director Didier Casas has argued that this approach enables teams to move quickly and that it makes Roussat an effective leader of complex projects spanning multiple business lines.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />

⚖️ '''Demand for integrity.''' The same sources emphasise that Roussat's willingness to delegate does not mean laxity; they note that he reacts strongly when he feels his trust has been abused, and that dishonesty or concealment of problems can provoke a tough response.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> His own departure from [[IBM]] over the treatment of a colleague is often cited internally as a formative episode underscoring his expectation of ethical behaviour from those around him and his readiness to make costly decisions on principle.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />

🧩 '''Perceptions among peers.''' Legal adviser Jean-Michel Darrois and other figures who have worked with Roussat in high-stakes negotiations describe him as discreet, intelligent and pragmatic, someone who listens patiently to detailed arguments from bankers, lawyers and regulators before summarising his position in a few clear sentences.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> Within the Bouygues group he is frequently contrasted with Martin Bouygues' more extrovert, politically connected style: where the founder's son is seen as a public figure, Roussat is viewed as a diligent company man whose authority rests on technical competence, resilience in crises and the loyalty he inspires among his teams.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" />

🚀 '''Legacy-in-progress.''' Commentators have noted that under Roussat's stewardship Bouygues has undergone one of the most significant strategic shifts in its history, combining the defence of its traditional construction and media base with an expansion into energy and services through Equans, while navigating technological change in telecoms and increasing environmental and social expectations.<ref name="MGEInterview" /><ref name="LeMondeBrothers" /> In public statements he has summarised his philosophy by emphasising that "it is people who make the difference" at Bouygues and by encouraging young engineers to choose work that excites them, suggesting that his long-term legacy may be measured as much in organisational culture as in financial metrics.<ref name="MGEInterview" />


== Controversies and challenges ==
== Controversies and challenges ==
⚖️ '''Strategic challenges.''' Roussat's tenure has involved navigating complex regulatory landscapes and failed consolidation attempts. Between 2014 and 2017, he participated in multiple failed merger negotiations for Bouygues Telecom with rivals such as [[Orange (telecommunications)|Orange]] and [[SFR]].<ref name="ChallengesProfile" /> More recently, in 2021, Roussat championed a proposed merger between the group's media subsidiary [[TF1]] and [[M6 (TV channel)|M6]] to create a French broadcasting champion capable of competing with global streaming platforms. However, the plan was abandoned in September 2022 after the [[Autorité de la concurrence]] (French competition authority) demanded divestitures that would have undermined the deal's industrial logic.<ref name="BusinessWireM6">{{cite web |url=https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220916005456/en/M6-METROPOLE-TELEVISION-Proposed-Merger-Between-the-TF1-and-M6-Groups-Abandoned |title=Proposed Merger Between the TF1 and M6 Groups Abandoned |publisher=[[Business Wire]] |date=2022-09-16 |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref> Roussat publicly criticized the regulatory decision for failing to account for the speed of change in the digital media sector but rapidly pivoted TF1's strategy back to standalone growth.<ref name="BusinessWireM6" />


🧨 '''Job cuts and social impact.''' The mass redundancy plan implemented at [[Bouygues Telecom]] in 2012–2013 remains the most contentious episode of Roussat's career, attracting criticism from trade unions and employees who questioned the depth of the cuts and the broader strategy in the face of Free Mobile's entry.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> While the plan was structured around voluntary departures and framed as necessary to preserve the company's long-term viability, it clashed with Bouygues' traditionally paternalistic culture and left a lasting impression on the workforce, as well as on Roussat himself, who later acknowledged the personal toll of the period.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />
== Personal life ==

🧶 '''Private interests.''' Roussat is known for maintaining a high degree of privacy, shunning the social circuit typical of Parisian executives. He is married to Florence, the former IBM colleague whose workplace treatment prompted his resignation from that company in 1995. He prioritizes family time, frequently returning to his hometown in the [[Allier (department)|Allier]] department to visit relatives and recharge.<ref name="ChallengesProfile" /> Among his few known hobbies is a passion for collecting hand-woven Oriental carpets, an interest sparked by his brother's work in [[Azerbaijan]].<ref name="ChallengesProfile" /> He is also an occasional hunter, participating in seasonal excursions in the [[Sologne]] region with Martin Bouygues. Financially, his compensation package was reported at approximately €5.4 million in recent years, a figure near the median for CAC 40 executives, and he holds a personal stake in the company worth several million euros.<ref name="SimplyWallSt">{{cite web |url=https://simplywall.st/fr/stocks/fr/capital-goods/epa-en/bouygues-shares/management |title=Bouygues SA (EN) Analyse de l'équipe de direction et de gestion |publisher=Simply Wall St |accessdate=2025-11-20}}</ref>
📉 '''Aborted mergers in telecoms and media.''' As chief of [[Bouygues Telecom]] and later as group CEO, Roussat played a central role in several ambitious but ultimately unsuccessful consolidation attempts, including four sets of negotiations in the mid-2010s to combine Bouygues Telecom with rivals [[SFR]], [[Orange S.A.|Orange]] or [[Free (ISP)|Free]].<ref name="ChallengesCheville" /> In 2021–2022 he backed a proposed merger of the group's television subsidiary [[TF1 Group|TF1]] with competitor M6, a project supported by [[RTL Group]] but abandoned in September 2022 after France's competition authority indicated that approval would require the divestment of one of the main channels, undermining the strategic rationale of the deal. The collapse of these deals prompted some criticism of Bouygues' ability to reshape its portfolio, but supporters argue that Roussat avoided overpaying for assets and adapted strategy quickly when regulatory or financial conditions proved unfavourable.<ref name="ChallengesCheville" />

🌍 '''ESG expectations and diversity.''' Like many large construction and telecom groups, Bouygues faces scrutiny over environmental, social and governance (ESG) matters, including the carbon footprint of its projects and the diversity of its management ranks.<ref name="MGEInterview" /> Under Roussat, the group has announced targets for reducing emissions and highlighted the role of Equans in providing energy-efficiency solutions, while also taking steps to promote women to senior roles, notably within [[Bouygues Telecom]], although observers note that progress on gender balance at the top of the group remains gradual.<ref name="MGEInterview" /> In keeping with his generally discreet style, Roussat has not associated himself with outspoken public positions on political issues or social debates, preferring to frame ESG matters as part of the company's operational responsibilities rather than as a personal platform.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" />

🕶 '''Low public visibility.''' A recurring critique in Parisian business circles is that, despite heading a 120,000-employee conglomerate, Roussat remains relatively unknown to the wider public compared with other French CEOs, in part because of his reluctance to cultivate a media profile.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" /> Some commentators suggest that this low-key approach reflects the particular governance structure of [[Bouygues]], where the founding family retains a controlling stake and Martin Bouygues continues to play an active role as chairman, while others argue that it allows Roussat to focus on execution and internal cohesion rather than personal branding.<ref name="LeMondeBrothers" /><ref name="ChallengesCheville" />


== Related content & more ==
== Related content & more ==


=== YouTube videos ===
=== YouTube videos ===
{{Youtube thumbnail | UqZ-0y9 | caption=Olivier Roussat presenting the Bouygues Group full-year financial results (Official Channel)}}
{{Youtube thumbnail | bJYSrnQjQnQ | caption=Interview "20 minutes with the CEO of Bouygues" in which Olivier Roussat discusses his career path and strategy for the group.}}
{{Youtube thumbnail | 9y0_8_7 | caption=Interview with Olivier Roussat on BFM Business regarding the Equans acquisition}}
{{Youtube thumbnail | LqSbNNS-0vc | caption=Radio Classique programme "Les voix de l'économie" featuring Olivier Roussat on Bouygues' role in the French and global economy.}}


=== biz/articles ===
=== biz/articles ===
* [[Bouygues]]
* [[Bouygues]]
* [[Equans]]
* [[Bouygues Telecom]]
* [[Martin Bouygues]]
* [[Martin Bouygues]]

<!-- Web sources checked for video identification: -->


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 02:56, 25 November 2025

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Overview

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Olivier Roussat

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👔 Olivier Roussat (born 1964) is a French engineer and business executive who has served as chief executive officer (CEO) of Bouygues since February 2021, becoming the first non-family member to lead the diversified construction, media and telecoms group.[4] Rising from modest provincial origins, he built his career inside Bouygues Telecom, steering the mobile operator through France's bruising price war of the 2010s before becoming Martin Bouygues' deputy and ultimately succeeding him as group CEO.[5] As chief executive, he has focused on strengthening Bouygues' core construction and telecom activities while expanding into energy and services through the acquisition of Equans.[6]

🧱 Operational linchpin of Bouygues. Within the Bouygues group, Roussat is widely regarded as "la cheville ouvrière" – the operational linchpin – responsible for translating the founding family's long-term vision into concrete projects across six business lines, from road building to television and mobile networks.[5] Combining an engineer's appetite for detail with a low-profile public persona, he has become known for rapid decision-making, hands-on involvement in technical matters and a management style that emphasises trust, loyalty and human relationships.[5][6]

Early life and education

🏡 Modest family background. Born in 1964 in the rural town of Moulins in central France, Roussat grew up far from the Parisian elite; his mother worked as a nursing aide in a religious hospice and his father ran a small trucking business.[5] From the age of 13 he took on a succession of small jobs – selling produce at local markets, mowing verges as a municipal worker and helping to load cattle onto his father's lorries – more to earn pocket money and learn the value of work than out of financial necessity, cultivating what he later described as a pragmatic "bon sens du terroir".[5]

🎓 Engineering studies at INSA Lyon. Academically strong, Roussat was admitted to the National Institute of Applied Sciences in Lyon (INSA Lyon), a public engineering school often described in France as a "social elevator" for talented students from non-elite backgrounds.[6] He chose electrical engineering, which he has described as the field "where we worked the hardest", and thrived in an environment that combined rigorous technical training with a broad humanities curriculum and strong student camaraderie.[6] During his studies he worked on a project examining the ethics of prenatal surgery, an experience he later cited as an early prompt to consider the human consequences of technological decisions alongside their technical feasibility.[6]

🧪 First steps in industry. After graduating from INSA Lyon in 1987 with an engineering degree, Roussat joined IBM France in 1988, beginning a fast-rising early career in information technology and corporate systems.[7] By his early thirties he was moving quickly up the hierarchy, but in April 1995 he resigned abruptly after what he saw as the unjust treatment of a finance controller colleague, Florence, who would later become his wife, a decision that would redirect his career toward the Bouygues group.[5]

Career

Bouygues Telecom

📶 Joining Bouygues Telecom. Leaving the relative security of IBM for a fledgling mobile operator, Roussat joined Bouygues Telecom in 1995, about a year after the subsidiary's creation, becoming employee number 265 in what was then a start-up within the Bouygues conglomerate.[5] His first boss, Bouygues veteran Philippe Montagner, introduced him to the group's culture and trained him in managing large-scale projects, contractual risk and capital-intensive infrastructure, shaping the risk-aware mindset that would characterise his later leadership.[5]

🛰 Building networks and operations. During the second half of the 1990s and early 2000s, Roussat held a series of technical and operational roles at Bouygues Telecom, where he helped establish the company's first network management centre and rationalised its information systems to support nationwide mobile coverage.[7] He earned a reputation for quick, unpretentious decision-making and for personally dismantling electronic devices to understand how they worked, traits that led colleagues to nickname him "Lucky Luke", after the comic-strip gunslinger reputed to shoot faster than his own shadow.[5]

📱 Chief executive of Bouygues Telecom. In 2007, at the age of 42, Roussat was appointed chief executive officer of Bouygues Telecom, then France's third-largest mobile operator, in succession to Montagner.[8][7] His promotion reflected the confidence of Bouygues patriarch Martin Bouygues, who saw in Roussat a loyal engineer capable of steering the telecom subsidiary through intensifying competition and new technology cycles in 3G and 4G mobile networks.[5]

⚔️ Free Mobile price war and restructuring. Roussat's tenure at Bouygues Telecom was defined by the disruptive entry of Free Mobile into the French market in 2012, which launched a low-cost offer that sparked a severe price war and led to a sharp fall in revenue across the sector; Bouygues Telecom recorded a 9% drop in sales in 2012 and was viewed as the hardest-hit operator in the shake-up.[5][8] In response, he oversaw a painful restructuring that included the first large-scale staff reduction in Bouygues' history, eliminating around 2,000 of 9,000 jobs through a voluntary redundancy plan, and personally addressed employees in the company's auditorium to explain the strategy and answer questions, an episode he later acknowledged as one of the most stressful periods of his career.[5]

🔄 Strategic repositioning and recovery. Alongside the cost-cutting, Roussat led a commercial and technological repositioning of Bouygues Telecom, cutting prices, accelerating the rollout of 4G networks ahead of rivals and launching new offers designed to retain and win back customers.[5] The company returned to profitability by the mid-2010s and was widely considered to have been saved from the worst effects of the price war; Nicolas Guérin, general counsel of competitor Orange, later remarked that Roussat was "one of those who saved Bouygues Telecom".[5] During the same period, he participated in several rounds of attempted consolidation in the French mobile market, including exploratory talks with SFR, Orange and Free, none of which ultimately resulted in a merger but which reinforced his reputation as a tough but pragmatic negotiator.[5]

Group leadership at Bouygues

🏗 Deputy CEO of the Bouygues group. In 2016, after nearly two decades in telecoms, Roussat was appointed deputy chief executive of Bouygues SA, moving from the operating subsidiary to the group's Paris headquarters and becoming Martin Bouygues' principal operational lieutenant.[5] He described this period as that of a "patron en formation" – a CEO in training – devoting considerable time to learning the group's construction and infrastructure businesses through site visits to projects such as tunnels in Hong Kong, casinos in Macao and roadworks in Madagascar, and filling his office shelves with hard hats, models of machinery and photographs from the field.[5]

🧭 Appointment as group chief executive. In February 2021 Martin Bouygues, approaching 70, stepped back from day-to-day management and the board appointed Roussat as chief executive officer of Bouygues SA, while Bouygues himself remained chairman.[4] The move made Roussat the first non-family CEO in the group's seven-decade history and placed him at the centre of a generational transition in which he was expected both to run the diversified conglomerate and to help prepare Martin Bouygues' son Edward and other family members for future leadership roles.[4]

🔌 Equans acquisition and diversification. Early in his tenure as group CEO, Roussat led Bouygues' €7.1 billion acquisition of Equans, an energy and services business carved out of Engie, in a transaction completed in 2022 that made Equans the group's largest business segment by revenue.[6] Presenting the deal as "historic", he argued that multi-technical services for energy efficiency and infrastructure would be central to the energy transition and provide a new growth engine for Bouygues.[6] Following the acquisition, he spent much of 2023 visiting Equans sites and meeting employees, emphasising integration into the wider group while seeking operational synergies.[6]

📡 Continuing influence in telecoms. Despite his wider responsibilities, Roussat has maintained a close involvement in Bouygues Telecom, continuing to attend weekly executive meetings and keeping what industry peers describe as a strong hand on key decisions regarding investment and technology.[5] Under his leadership, the operator has invested heavily in 5G networks and explored partnerships with equipment suppliers such as Huawei; accounts of an extended technical discussion he held with Huawei engineers in China are often cited internally to illustrate his continuing interest in the engineering aspects of telecom infrastructure.[5]

💹 Financial performance under his tenure. Bouygues' financial results recovered strongly in the early years of Roussat's tenure as group CEO, with revenues rising by around 18% between 2021 and 2023 to reach approximately €44.3 billion, supported both by organic growth and the consolidation of Equans.[9] Over 2023 the group's share price gained about 45% on the Paris market, outpacing the broader indices and signalling investor approval of the strategy pursued under his leadership.[10] Analysts have increasingly compared Bouygues with specialist rivals such as Vinci and Eiffage in construction and with Orange and SFR in telecoms when assessing the group's performance.[9]

Compensation, shareholding and board roles

💶 Executive remuneration. As CEO of a CAC 40 company, Roussat receives a remuneration package that is substantial by French standards but close to the median among large listed groups. In the most recently disclosed year, his total compensation amounted to about €5.4 million, including a fixed salary of €1.5 million with the remainder composed of annual bonuses and long-term share-based incentives tied to performance criteria.[11] His pay levels reflect Bouygues' policy of moderating executive remuneration compared with some French luxury and technology groups whose CEOs receive much higher packages.[11]

📊 Share ownership and wealth. Over several decades at Bouygues, Roussat has accumulated a personal shareholding of roughly 0.02% of the group's capital, a stake valued at around €3.6 million at recent market prices, alongside pension rights and other assets built up over his career.[11] While these holdings make him a multi-millionaire, his personal wealth remains modest in comparison with that of the Bouygues founding family, whose aggregate fortune has been estimated in the billions of euros.[4]

🏛 Directorships within and beyond Bouygues. In addition to his role as group CEO, Roussat holds several board mandates within the Bouygues ecosystem. He has served as a director of TF1 Group and as a board member or chair of key subsidiaries including Bouygues Telecom, Colas, Bouygues Construction and Equans, allowing him to remain closely involved in operational decisions across the group's business segments.[7] Between 2021 and 2023 he was also an independent director of Capgemini, bringing his technological and telecoms experience to the IT services group's board before stepping down to avoid overextension once his responsibilities at Bouygues intensified.[7]

Personal life and interests

🕊 Discreet public profile. Despite leading a large listed group, Roussat is known for his discretion and reluctance to seek media attention, preferring to let results speak for themselves and rarely giving high-profile interviews outside earnings calls or specific project announcements.[5] Associates describe him as neither shy nor aloof but rather as someone who avoids the Paris social circuit and high-society events, in keeping with his modest origins and emphasis on professional substance over personal visibility.[4]

👨‍👩‍👧 Family and attachment to his roots. Roussat is married to Florence, the former IBM finance controller whose treatment by management prompted his departure from the company in 1995, and the couple have children whose lives they keep out of the public eye.[5] He has stated that family time is "capital" for him and is known to reserve his weekends as far as possible for his wife and children, while making regular trips – roughly once a month – back to his native Allier region to visit his mother, see old friends and spend time at a farmhouse that serves as a rural retreat.[4]

🍷 Tastes and pastimes. Colleagues depict Roussat as enjoying simple but convivial pleasures, such as inviting teams to celebrate milestones over plates of Iberian ham and glasses of red wine in a favourite Bellota-Bellota cellar near the Boulogne headquarters.[5] He has developed an unusual passion for hand-woven silk and wool carpets after discovering Persian and Caucasian rugs through his younger brother's work on Bouygues projects in Azerbaijan, and has accumulated a small collection that decorates his office and home.[5] Although he occasionally joins hunting weekends in the Sologne forests with Martin Bouygues and other executives, accounts suggest he is as interested in conversation around the lodge fireplace as in the pursuit of game.[4]

📚 Reading, travel and everyday habits. Away from work, Roussat is reported to enjoy reading, particularly history and non-fiction, and travelling with his family to discover new cultures, often returning from trips with another rug rolled under his arm.[5] In daily life he favours well-cut but understated Italian suits worn with open-collar shirts, reinforcing an image of understated neatness rather than ostentation, and he is said to maintain a certain distance by sharing his mobile phone number sparingly, not out of arrogance but to draw boundaries between professional obligations and private space.[5]

Management style and reputation

🤝 Trust-based, decentralised leadership. Accounts from colleagues underline that Roussat's management style centres on trust and delegation: he has stated explicitly that he prefers to give his trust "a priori" as the foundation of a decentralised organisation, granting substantial autonomy to managers while expecting them to act responsibly.[6] Former Bouygues Telecom deputy director Didier Casas has argued that this approach enables teams to move quickly and that it makes Roussat an effective leader of complex projects spanning multiple business lines.[5]

⚖️ Demand for integrity. The same sources emphasise that Roussat's willingness to delegate does not mean laxity; they note that he reacts strongly when he feels his trust has been abused, and that dishonesty or concealment of problems can provoke a tough response.[5] His own departure from IBM over the treatment of a colleague is often cited internally as a formative episode underscoring his expectation of ethical behaviour from those around him and his readiness to make costly decisions on principle.[5]

🧩 Perceptions among peers. Legal adviser Jean-Michel Darrois and other figures who have worked with Roussat in high-stakes negotiations describe him as discreet, intelligent and pragmatic, someone who listens patiently to detailed arguments from bankers, lawyers and regulators before summarising his position in a few clear sentences.[5] Within the Bouygues group he is frequently contrasted with Martin Bouygues' more extrovert, politically connected style: where the founder's son is seen as a public figure, Roussat is viewed as a diligent company man whose authority rests on technical competence, resilience in crises and the loyalty he inspires among his teams.[4]

🚀 Legacy-in-progress. Commentators have noted that under Roussat's stewardship Bouygues has undergone one of the most significant strategic shifts in its history, combining the defence of its traditional construction and media base with an expansion into energy and services through Equans, while navigating technological change in telecoms and increasing environmental and social expectations.[6][4] In public statements he has summarised his philosophy by emphasising that "it is people who make the difference" at Bouygues and by encouraging young engineers to choose work that excites them, suggesting that his long-term legacy may be measured as much in organisational culture as in financial metrics.[6]

Controversies and challenges

🧨 Job cuts and social impact. The mass redundancy plan implemented at Bouygues Telecom in 2012–2013 remains the most contentious episode of Roussat's career, attracting criticism from trade unions and employees who questioned the depth of the cuts and the broader strategy in the face of Free Mobile's entry.[5] While the plan was structured around voluntary departures and framed as necessary to preserve the company's long-term viability, it clashed with Bouygues' traditionally paternalistic culture and left a lasting impression on the workforce, as well as on Roussat himself, who later acknowledged the personal toll of the period.[5]

📉 Aborted mergers in telecoms and media. As chief of Bouygues Telecom and later as group CEO, Roussat played a central role in several ambitious but ultimately unsuccessful consolidation attempts, including four sets of negotiations in the mid-2010s to combine Bouygues Telecom with rivals SFR, Orange or Free.[5] In 2021–2022 he backed a proposed merger of the group's television subsidiary TF1 with competitor M6, a project supported by RTL Group but abandoned in September 2022 after France's competition authority indicated that approval would require the divestment of one of the main channels, undermining the strategic rationale of the deal. The collapse of these deals prompted some criticism of Bouygues' ability to reshape its portfolio, but supporters argue that Roussat avoided overpaying for assets and adapted strategy quickly when regulatory or financial conditions proved unfavourable.[5]

🌍 ESG expectations and diversity. Like many large construction and telecom groups, Bouygues faces scrutiny over environmental, social and governance (ESG) matters, including the carbon footprint of its projects and the diversity of its management ranks.[6] Under Roussat, the group has announced targets for reducing emissions and highlighted the role of Equans in providing energy-efficiency solutions, while also taking steps to promote women to senior roles, notably within Bouygues Telecom, although observers note that progress on gender balance at the top of the group remains gradual.[6] In keeping with his generally discreet style, Roussat has not associated himself with outspoken public positions on political issues or social debates, preferring to frame ESG matters as part of the company's operational responsibilities rather than as a personal platform.[4]

🕶 Low public visibility. A recurring critique in Parisian business circles is that, despite heading a 120,000-employee conglomerate, Roussat remains relatively unknown to the wider public compared with other French CEOs, in part because of his reluctance to cultivate a media profile.[4] Some commentators suggest that this low-key approach reflects the particular governance structure of Bouygues, where the founding family retains a controlling stake and Martin Bouygues continues to play an active role as chairman, while others argue that it allows Roussat to focus on execution and internal cohesion rather than personal branding.[4][5]

Related content & more

YouTube videos

Interview "20 minutes with the CEO of Bouygues" in which Olivier Roussat discusses his career path and strategy for the group.
Radio Classique programme "Les voix de l'économie" featuring Olivier Roussat on Bouygues' role in the French and global economy.

biz/articles


References

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