Tala Champions Digital Financial Inclusion For The Global Majority By Turning Access To Opportunities For Growth

Financial access alone is not enough. A new Atlantic Council report highlights that three billion adults still struggle to fully use formal financial services despite owning accounts and digital devices.

When Memes Become Accountability: How FTTM Learned It Had Power, Not Just Reach

Memes in the Philippines travel faster than traditional headlines, and FTTM recognizes how every post can create impact beyond simple online reactions. #PAGEONESpotlight_MarkAnicas #PAGEONESpotlight_FTTM #PAGEONESpotlight_FollowTheTrendMovement

PAGEONE Group Executives Named Jurors For Prestigious Asia Pacific Stevie Awards

Four PAGEONE Group executives join the Asia Pacific Stevie Awards jury, highlighting rising Philippine leadership in global communications.

FTTM’s Process: Speed On Screen, Precision Behind The Scenes

FTTM’s humor may feel instinctive, but behind it is a disciplined system built on listening, verification, and responsibility. #PAGEONESpotlight_MarkAnicas #PAGEONESpotlight_FTTM #PAGEONESpotlight_FollowTheTrendMovement
X

Leadership, Vision, And Communication Drive CEO Media Perception

Strong communication skills make Filipino CEOs media favorites.

Leadership, Vision, And Communication Drive CEO Media Perception

861
861

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Financial results may drive the headlines, but in 2025, it was communication, foresight, and leadership that defined Filipino CEOs’ media reputation. According to CARMA’s CEO Media Index, all ten top CEOs monitored received positive to strongly positive coverage, with favorability scores averaging between 57 and 63.

The report found that CEOs like Ramon S. Ang and Fabian Dee (Metrobank) earned trust by translating complex financial data into narratives that stakeholders could easily grasp. Carl Raymond Cruz, newly appointed at Globe, was praised for quickly articulating a bold digital inclusion agenda.

Interestingly, ethical behavior was largely absent from media portrayals, despite coverage of sustainability initiatives. One exception was Ang, who was spotlighted for both corporate responsibility—via San Miguel’s award-winning CSR programs—and personal acts of integrity, such as paying medical expenses for accident victims.

Sustainability also proved to be a central narrative, with leaders like Pangilinan, Ortiz, and Limcaoco (BPI) earning visibility for green financing, digital innovation, and governance reforms.

“CEOs were not just reporting results,” CARMA noted, “they were framing their companies’ roles in society’s progress.” This shift highlights how, in today’s Philippines, the reputation of corporate leaders rests not only on profits but also on how they inspire confidence, champion values, and communicate a clear path forward.