The problem nobody wanted to own.
I was 21 years old, still in law school, working full-time as a Junior Analyst at Edenred — a French fintech operating across 42 countries. My job was straightforward: organize fleet management data for major enterprise accounts. Clean up spreadsheets. Cross-reference receipts. Flag anomalies.
The anomalies were everywhere.
Fleet management — the process of controlling fuel cards, vehicle expenses, and logistics costs for large corporations — was one of the most complex and fraud-prone areas in the B2B expense management business. Drivers inflating mileage. Suppliers billing for services never rendered. Internal processes with no audit trail. For a company whose enterprise clients represented hundreds of millions in annual revenue, this wasn't an accounting problem. It was an existential risk that nobody had formalized a response to.
There was no team. No methodology. No playbook. There was a junior analyst with a spreadsheet and a growing sense that this gap was much bigger than anyone had acknowledged.
The decision to move before being asked.
I didn't wait for a mandate. I started mapping the problem systematically — cataloguing fraud patterns, cost leakage types, and the operational gaps that made them possible. I brought my findings to leadership not as a complaint, but as a proposal: this area needs a dedicated structure, and I want to build it.
It was a bold ask for someone still finishing his undergraduate degree. But the data was undeniable. And I had something more valuable than seniority: I had already done the work to understand the problem deeply enough to propose a solution.
They gave me the green light.
"There was no team. No methodology. No playbook. There was a junior analyst with a spreadsheet and a growing sense that this gap was much bigger than anyone had acknowledged."
Building from one.
The first year was about proving the concept. I developed a proprietary fleet analytics methodology — a structured framework for identifying cost leakages across client operations. I ran it manually at first, account by account, generating insights that clients had never seen before. The results were immediate: an average of 15% cost savings per client. The word spread fast inside the sales organization.
As demand grew, so did the team. I hired carefully — prioritizing analytical rigor and client empathy over pure technical skill. I developed SOPs that didn't just document processes but transferred knowledge in a way that made the team genuinely self-sufficient. When I eventually left the role four years later, the division didn't skip a beat.
By that point, we had grown from one person to 45. We were focused exclusively on Edenred's top 100 enterprise accounts. And we were directly responsible for retaining 40% of the company's total revenue.
None of this works without the people above you.
There's a version of this story where I take all the credit. That version would be dishonest.
Managing upward was just as important as managing the team I was building. My direct manager and our director were not passive observers — they were active participants. They listened when I came to them with ideas that probably sounded half-baked at first. They pushed back when my thinking had gaps, and they bought in when the logic was sound. They gave me room to fail safely and cover when I needed it.
What I learned from them wasn't just operational — it was about how leadership actually works. That before you can lead a team of 45, you need to know how to bring one person along. That active listening isn't a soft skill — it's the mechanism by which trust gets built. That the most experienced person in the room often isn't the loudest one, and that the best thing a young leader can do is shut up long enough to learn something.
I came into that role with energy and ambition. I left it with judgment. That difference was entirely the result of having leaders who were willing to invest in me — to hear my crazy ideas, to guide the ones worth pursuing, and to kill the ones that weren't. A structure that protects $400M in revenue doesn't get built in isolation. It gets built in conversation.
"I came into that role with energy and ambition. I left it with judgment. That difference was entirely the result of having leaders who were willing to invest in me."
What the numbers don't show.
The 98% client satisfaction rate and 25-point NPS improvement are real, and I'm proud of them. But what the metrics don't capture is the organizational shift that happened along the way.
Before this division existed, enterprise account retention was reactive — the company responded to problems after clients raised them. We changed that model entirely. By embedding ourselves in client operations, we moved retention upstream: identifying risks before they became complaints, and delivering proactive value before clients thought to look elsewhere.
We also reversed churn for 18 enterprise clients who were on the verge of leaving. That's 18 relationships — each representing significant annual contract value — that stayed because someone finally understood their operations well enough to fix the right problems.
"Before this division existed, enterprise account retention was reactive. We changed that model entirely."
The leadership lesson I didn't expect.
Building a team of 45 people before I had graduated taught me something that no business school course had yet: the most important thing a leader does is make themselves replaceable.
Every promotion I took in my career at Edenred, I left behind someone who was ready to fill the role I was vacating. Tayana started as an operational assistant in my department and ended up replacing me as Operations Coordinator when I became Product Manager. That wasn't an accident — it was deliberate. I spent the last year in every role I held developing my successor, because I knew the organization's resilience depended on it.
The $400M figure represents revenue protected. But the more durable outcome was a division that outlasted its founder — still running, still growing, long after I moved on.
Key Takeaways
- The most valuable problems to solve are the ones nobody has claimed ownership of yet.
- A methodology that transfers knowledge is worth more than a methodology that produces results.
- Proactive value creation is a retention strategy. Reactive problem-solving is not.
- The real measure of leadership is what happens when you leave.