A wave of leadership changes is sweeping through German business, health care and public administration, as companies install dual management teams, create specialized artificial-intelligence roles and respond to financial pressures. The moves reflect a broader push toward digital transformation and structural reform across sectors.
Generali Deutschland is carving out a top job focused entirely on artificial intelligence. Stefan Weih, a 43-year-old executive poached from a competitor, will become Head of AI, Digitalization & Process Mining on July 15. He will report directly to the chief operating officer, signaling the insurer’s bet on automation and data-driven efficiency.
In the real estate sector, Engel & Völkers has restructured its executive floor after the departure of Jawed Barna. Till-Fabian Zalewski and Stefan Eck will now lead the international property brokerage as co-CEOs, charged with driving global growth and digital change. A similar generational handover took place at the engineering services provider Ferchau GmbH, where founder Frank Ferchau handed operational control to Alexander Schulz and stepped into the role of chairman. The company marks its 60th anniversary this year.
Financial distress is catalysing change in health care. The struggling Spital Wetzikon in Switzerland faces a potential takeover after receiving offers from both the Thurgau hospital group Thurmed AG and Swiss Medical Network. Creditors must now decide on a debt haircut of up to 180 million Swiss francs. The moratorium on payments has been extended until December 2026. Meanwhile, on a local level, the town of Varel has teamed up with regional physicians to create a new medical centre, MVZ Gesundheitszentrum Varel GmbH. Management will be handled by Medoplan GmbH, with the goal of acquiring statutory health insurance posts in surgery, paediatrics and gynaecology.
Several hospitals and academic institutions are also turning over their leadership. At the kbo-Donau-Altmühl-Kliniken in Bavaria, Dr. Barbara Vrana-Reisinger took over as chief physician for psychiatry and psychotherapy on July 1. A new medical director is scheduled to start on November 1. In Cologne, the Kölner Hochschule für Katholische Theologie (KHKT) will see a clean sweep at the end of the summer semester: its rector, managing director and chancellor are all leaving. The departures stem from prolonged conflicts over the university’s direction and finances; it receives roughly two million euros annually from church tax revenues.
Cultural institutions are also planning ahead. The Lucerne Festival has appointed Sebastian Nordmann as its artistic director starting August 13. His programming will revolve around the theme “American Dreams”, a nod to the 250th anniversary of the United States.
Elsewhere in the corporate world, Sandler AG brought Katharina Obergruber onto its board effective September 1. At Sartorius AG, a planned leadership transition in lab technology was executed last year.
Public administration is not immune to the shake-up. In the Wetterau district of Hesse, Klaus Karger has taken sole charge of the economic development agency WiReg after his long-time colleague retired in March. The agency relocated to Niddatal-Ilbenstadt on July 1.










