Keeping yourself anonymous isn't compatible with a lot of even moderately senior-level jobs out there.
More generally --the billions of hours and growing of audio video on YouTube, TikTok, and other platforms -- is literally someone in real life (most cases), likely some employee, that could be or become a middle manager somewhere.
1. Most companies don't do that.
2. AWS, for example, has what, 100k employees? What percentage of them are actually featured in those videos?
>More generally --the billions of hours and growing of audio video on YouTube, TikTok, and other platforms -- is literally someone in real life (most cases), likely some employee, that could be or become a middle manager somewhere.
A vanishingly small percentage of that content is generated as part of that middle management job. Yes, many people choose to place themselves on publicly accessible video, but it mostly isn't part of a mid level office job, so not doing so isn't incompatible with holding such a position.
5 minutes later, one of them came up with a pic: it was a group photo of the company staff, taken a few weeks earlier (with me skulking at the back; I never wanted to be in the photo). It was in an article on the company blog.