A DAY IN THE LIFE –
Michelle LeBlanc
Director,
Strategic Marketing
Motorola
Career planning can be overwhelming. With a
strong economy, the opportunities presented to me at business school
seemed endless. Following the advice of the career center, I established
my criteria up front to focus my search: I wanted to join a well-known,
established, high-tech company in a product marketing position.
Motorola was an easy choice. I
networked through a student organization and was invited to a
company-sponsored dinner where I met a number of executives. Following
the dinner, I met regularly with these executives to talk about
opportunities within the company and visited the company to meet the
team and to experience the culture. I never had a formal interview, but
months later when I needed to make a decision, I knew the position, the
team and the company very well, and they knew my skills and career
objectives.
We decided that I should join
the future business group in a strategic marketing role for one to two
years and then join a business unit in a strategic marketing role for
one to two years and then join a business unit in a product marketing
position. Working in a strategic marketing position would allow me to
build on my existing skill set in strategy and business development to
promote entrepreneurship within Motorola. Additionally, I could use the
time there to better understand the business units for my next career
step into product management.
Future business is a corporate
group that has a mandate to identify and establish platforms for future
growth. The group includes venture investing, technology scouting,
patent portfolio management and a business incubator. My job as director
of strategic marketing is to champion and to build the marketing plan
for our initiatives. In this capacity, I have had a variety interesting
experiences.
My first project was to develop
a messaging and communications strategy for our start-up enterprise,
BioChip Systems. I worked with advertising agencies and company managers
to create a vision, the overall message and customized messages for
different audiences. I then managed the tactical implementation,
including press releases, product presentations and company literature,
for the first four months until the marketing staff was hired. The
project required strong leadership skills to communicate the importance
of a messaging and communications plan and then evoke participation and
collaboration to define the important messages.
I worked with a group to decide
whether to invest millions of dollars in a new technology. One team
considered the patent position, another considered the strengths and
weaknesses of the technology, and my team considered the world market
potential. I made my recommendations to an executive vice-president and
the chief operating officer. The project required strong analytical
skills to understand the technology and the dynamics of the potential
market. I relied heavily on the expertise of my teammates.
I also engaged strategic partnerships with
companies and academia. In one project, I negotiated an investment and
intellectual property agreement beyond the terms of the letter of
intent. I worked closely with the strategic partner and a number of law
firms to create the documents that will guide the relationship over the
next three years. The project required strong interpersonal skills,
negotiation skills and attention to detail. I have a new appreciation
for the amount of time and energy required to consider every detail in
such agreements.
I also worked with engineers to
develop business plans for new businesses. My responsibility was to
sketch out the marketing plan, including customer segmentation, product
specifications, pricing and distribution. These projects required strong
written and communication skills and the ability to identify and ask the
hard questions.
I have just completed my first
year here and have decided to join a business unit sooner rather than
later. While I have enjoyed my position and learned a lot, I look back
to my criteria and realize that I am not doing what I wanted to do. I
have been a strategy position for the duration of my career, and it is
time to develop operational experience.
I am now exploring opportunities
in the business units for positions in product marketing. In the past
year, I have learned about my strengths and weaknesses as well as my
needs and objectives. One year smarter, I would add one important
criterion to my job search: a great team. A great team will teach you
new skills, will support you when you are weak and enable you when you
are strong. Each of my projects is only as good as the strength of my
team. The people with whom you work can either make your job wonderful
or a “character-building experience.”
A DAY IN THE LIFE
Rodney Brown
Assistant Brand
Manager
Nestle
As an assistant brand manager
for the Turtles, Raisinets, Goobers and SnoCaps brand group, no two days
are ever the same. When people call me, they want action not today, but
yesterday, which always makes things interesting. My job provides me a
unique opportunity to get exposure to both brand and channel management.
My brand responsibilities fall
into three categories. 1) Make things happen. I am constantly
called upon to come up with new ideas and tactics to drive the business,
whether it is an idea for a promotion or a new line extension; 2)
Make sure things happen. I often act as a project manager, which
entails overseeing all aspects of a project until completion. Most
projects require me to work very closely with all cross-functional
groups: packaging, design, finance, technical packaging, product
engineering, supply chain, sales, regulatory and legal. Some projects
are very technical in nature while others are creative. 3) Figure out
what happened. As the assistant for the brand group, I am expected
to do most of the analysis on the businesses (shipments, consumption,
promotions, budgets and competition), which is great because it allows
me to add value to any meeting or conversation concerning my brands.
Formal brand reports are done on a monthly basis, while informal updates
are done all day long.
My channel responsibilities can
be challenging as my brand duties. Our group is charged with managing
the concession packs of all brands in the division. We are responsible
for meeting sales targets, forecasting, developing promotions and
managing the flow of information between marketing and sales. Working
closely with our key account can be tough, but it gives me a better
appreciation of the challenges our sales force faces.
My favorite part of the job
usually involves making things happen. I love coming up with creative
and innovative ideas to drive the business. Brand management activates
my entrepreneurial spirit; it is exciting to see my ideas go from a
concept to a profitable reality. One of the most exciting things for me
as a marketer is seeing products that I worked on at retail. The feeling
I get when I see the new Raisinets packaging on the shelf makes up for
all the 12-hour days it took to make it happen. What is most frustrating
about my job is that there is never enough time or resources to execute
all of the great ideas. But, of course, there is always next year.
To excel in brand management,
you must have the complete package: a blend of both hard and soft
skills. Hard skills include the ability to analyze financial, sales and
technical data, and to think strategically about business issues as they
relate to your brand. These skills will help you make things happen and
figure out what happened, but the soft skills are necessary to make sure
things happen. Effective communication and leadership are vital keys to
success. Strong communication skills are critical: often an idea has to
be sold ten times before it is officially approved. Many times it is not
the best idea that gets executed, but the one that is well thought out,
clearly defined and strongly presented. Leadership plays an important
role when managing projects: it is essential in getting the attention
and active participation of cross-functional partners. The ability to
prioritize an manage time is also important, or your days at work will
quickly turn into nights.
In the short term, my goal is to
follow the traditional consumer packaged goods marketing path, which
will lead to a position as brand manager. There are many well-educated
and talented individuals who have similar aspirations, and manager spots
are limited. But I have always been motivated by competition, so I
welcome the challenge.
A DAY IN THE LIFE
Tricia
Buenvenida
Assistant
Marketing Manager
L’Oreal USA,
Inc.
As an assistant marketing manager at L’Oreal USA,
Inc., it is hard to describe a typical day, as there isn’t one. Charged
with brand management responsibilities for the consumer products
division’s mascara segment (which encompasses five existing brands, plus
new products in development), I am responsible for maintaining the
profitability of the business not only daily, but also in developing and
implementing strategies that will help drive its long-term growth and
success within the competitive cosmetics landscape. This requires using
both my analytical skills and creative abilities, as I forecast consumer
sell-through and shipments while also helping to develop and execute
strong brand programs that incorporate compelling trade and consumer
incentives. It is these exciting challenges coupled with my passion for
beauty industry that make my career especially rewarding.
I joined L’Oreal USA, Inc. in
August 1999 after graduating with my MBA. Although the company now
formally recruits on campus, at the time, I was conducting my own
independent job search, relying on relationships with former business
associates – I had worked in beauty/fashion advertising before business
school. Business interactions with my peers working on other brands
within my division help me to understand how their segments contribute
to the overall profitability of the division and I can appreciate the
strategies of the total brand portfolio and gain a sense of the bigger
business picture.
I feel this is essential, as I
am generally focused on my own particular business – monitoring and
keeping apace of industry trends and competitive new products, their
formulas, positioning and marketing plans; ensuring that our
laboratories quickly provide new formulas that deliver unmet or improved
consumer benefits, while manufacturing produces them to meet a planned a
ship date; researching consumer attitude and feedback on concepts;
recommending creative strategies for packaging, displays, promotional
vehicles and advertising; analyzing the volume of effectiveness of
programs or proper pricing of products based on cost of goods; and
working with our sales team to distribute the product and deliver strong
brand presence in retail accounts. Indeed, I feel like I am running my
own business sometimes, as I need to be cognizant of all the factors
that can impede a brand’s competitive position. It can sometimes be a
juggling act, as I prioritize which decisions and projects are most
important on a strategic and timing basis, and must do this without
sacrificing the success of another brand. However, it is extremely
satisfying when I do see my brands perform well and achieve a strong
market share because of strategies that I helped to implement.
I realize that my current job
allows me to put my MBA education into action as I learn the operations
of the business, but I know that I alone cannot drive the success of the
brand. I have found that teamwork is truly important, within sales,
finance, R&D, manufacturing, product development, creative services, our
advertising agency, as well as our marketing team. It is our shared
ambition to have premium-performing and top-selling products in the
marketplace that produce winners out of our brands. We work hard but we
have fun and love the industry – and usually, the results speak for
themselves. The more I progress in my career, the more I see the value
of working with smart and savvy people. I learn something new every day
from the knowledge and experience of my supervisors. I am constantly
being challenged, and therefore raise the bar of excellence for myself
and ultimately for our products. As someone at an early point in her
career, I find the interaction invaluable in my development as a
business leader. But even more fundamental than that, it is the people
you work with that make the difference in a productive and enjoyable
corporate environment.
Effective interaction and clear
communication with others is essential to career success. Strong
communication and presentation skills help influence decisions and
articulate the importance of a project, sell new ideas or concepts, and
sometimes diffuse difficult situations if two functional groups are in
disagreement. It is also important to have a long-term strategic vision,
strong attention to detail, problem-solving and analytical skills, the
ability to manage and execute several projects and deadlines, and an
awareness of the cultural world as it inspires “out-of-the-box” creative
thinking.
I know that in order to progress
in my career, I need to develop and perfect those skills, while learning
the operational aspects of the business. Opportunities to present
marketing plans or strategic project decisions at divisional meetings
have helped me to work on attaining these objectives. It is my goal to
continue to build strong business relationships, and ultimately, as a
leader, to inspire confidence, spark new ideas and identify new business
opportunities that will be successful and profitable.
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