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Pandora Picks First Woman to Lead Jewellery Firm

Current chief marketing officer, Berta de Pablos-Barbier, will take over as CEO in March.
Before joining Pandora, Berta de Pablos-Barbier served as the head of LVMH champagne brands.
Before joining Pandora, Berta de Pablos-Barbier served as the head of LVMH champagne brands.

Pandora A/S, which sells more pieces of jewellery than any other company in the world, picked its first woman as top leader, an adjustment to its male-dominated C-suite, which for long has been out-of-whack with the customer base.

Berta de Pablos-Barbier, the Copenhagen-based company’s current chief marketing officer, will take over as chief executive officer in March, according to a statement on Tuesday. She’s replacing Alexander Lacik, 60, who’s retiring.

Pandora, whose products are used almost exclusively by women, has worked on improving its gender balance for years, but has failed to make large strides at the top of its organisation. The company has sold sustainability-linked bonds that among other things target a bigger proportion of women in leadership roles and has set up a gender parity target for top leaders to be reached in 2030.

Pandora CEO Leaves After Strong Run

Shares have gained about 150 percent under Lacik.

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Still, de Pablos-Barbier, a Spanish national, is currently the only woman in Pandora’s eight-person executive leadership team. Gender equality is better at Pandora’s board, where half of the eight people are women.

Lacik has been able to insert some calm around Pandora during his six-and-a-half year tenure, ending a series of profit warnings under his predecessor Anders Colding Friis. Pandora’s shares have gained an annualized 23 percent under Lacik, compared with a peer average of about 11 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Before joining Pandora in 2024, de Pablos-Barbier, 56, was the CEO of Moet & Chandon. She has also had executive positions at brands such as Mars and Lacoste.

“Even though we are the largest in our industry, Pandora still holds significant untapped potential,” she said in a statement.

By Christian Wienberg

Learn more:

Pandora’s Latest Plan to Charm Gen-Z

Inspired by ancient Roman coins, the brand’s Talisman collection — its biggest product drop of 2025 — marks another step in its push to become a more fashion-oriented jeweller.

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