Marketing Today With Alan Hart

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 268:54:34
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Synopsis

Alan Hart, host of Marketing Today, goes behind the scenes with the world's best chief marketing officers and business leaders. Listen in to learn their strategies, tips and advice. What makes a great brand, marketing campaign, or turnaround? Learn from the experience and stories of these great marketing and business leaders so you can unleash your potential.

Episodes

  • 144: David Cancel’s passion fuels Drift

    08/04/2019 Duration: 22min

    Marketing Today at the Adobe Summit in Las Vegas The 2019 Adobe Summit took place March 26–28 in Las Vegas, gathering everyone from advertisers, content managers, and analysts to marketers of all stripes: digital, social, e-commerce — you name it.Marketing Today was there for all three days of the conference, taking the opportunity to speak with attendees who discussed the companies they've created, led, or worked for, their takeaways and perspective on what they saw and heard at the conference, as well as more universal aspects of their life and career — sharing some of the best advice they've received and things they love and hate — or just really dislike.David Cancel – CEO and Founder at DriftDavid Cancel is the epitome of entrepreneurship. He has created companies like HubSpot, Performable, Ghostery, and Compete to bring hypergrowth products to market. Not only that, he is the Entrepreneur in Residence at Harvard Business School and has been featured in The New York Time

  • 143: Intel’s Alyson Griffin believes in the power of change

    03/04/2019 Duration: 42min

    For this week's episode of “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with Alyson Griffin, vice president of global marketing at Intel, where she's recently taken the reins as global marketing lead for Intel's IoT Group. During the course of their conversation, Griffin talks about her decision to leave pharmacy school in something of a seismic career shift, her subsequent decision to leave HP after 17 years for an opportunity with Intel, and her advice for young marketers. The common thread that ties those elements together: change.As Griffin explains, “For young marketers, in general, I'd say that change is good. I love change, and some people don't, and I've always kind of scratched my head about that. Going into a different business unit or a different company or a different geography or even a different function…changing like that is really important — to be well-rounded, to get different experiences and different points of view.”And about change, Griffin goes on to add, &ldqu

  • 142: DCN’s Jason Kint discusses the Facebook–Google duopoly

    27/03/2019 Duration: 35min

    This week on “Marketing Today,” Alan's guest is Jason Kint, CEO of Digital Content Next, a nonprofit trade organization that plays a strategic role working on behalf of digital content companies in managing direct relationships between consumers and marketers. In doing so, DCN provides research and advocacy in guiding established media companies, including The New York Times, NBC, Condé Nast, and ESPN, as well as digitally native organizations like Slate, Vox, and Business Insider.During the course of his discussion with Alan, Kint outlines DCN's premium digital advertising marketplace, TrustX, and he discusses the duopoly of Facebook and Google as well as the issue of trust — or lack thereof — when it comes to those two platforms.In talking about the state of affairs in the digital realm regarding privacy practices and their impact on consumer trust, Kint says, “If you look at the data around user trust, in the digital environment and digital advertising, whether it be ba

  • 141: Mizzen + Main is the perfect fit for CMO Stephanie Swingle

    20/03/2019 Duration: 39min

    This week on “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with Stephanie Swingle, chief marketing officer for Mizzen + Main, a company with a new way of making and marketing men's shirts. Swingle made the move from consulting early in her career to working in CPG for Pepsi with a stop in between to earn an MBA from Harvard. After almost five years at Pepsi, she made the leap to the D2C disruptor, Mizzen + Main.In talking about brands like Mizzen + Main pushing back on the Amazon Effect and the company's ubiquitous endless shelf, Swingle says, “There's going to be higher expectations from consumers for things that they consider differentiated or premium. And part of that comes from the increasing standards of transparency and trust. And I think that's a really exciting place to play, when you can be differentiated on product and experience, and just building something that means so much to the consumer and creates that positive value through the strong experience that you're providing.”Highlights from

  • 140: New York Times CMO David Rubin on the paper’s brave new world

    13/03/2019 Duration: 41min

    This week on “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with David Rubin, chief marketing officer at The New York Times.With perhaps a somewhat unexpected career beginning for a marketer — right after college he spent two years working on Capitol Hill for a Milwaukee congressman and two years in the Treasury Department during the Clinton administration — Rubin subsequently received an MBA from the Wharton School before joining Unilever. During his 13 years at Unilever, Rubin worked in brand building, helping launch Axe body spray and leading the turnaround of their U.S. Hair division. After that, he spent two years at Pinterest as their head of global brand before joining The Times.During the podcast, Rubin discusses how being a product of the Baltimore public school system shaped the way he builds teams, the Fake News phenomenon, the recent TV-focused work he's overseen in marketing The New York Times, and the paper's shift from an advertising-based business model to one that is subscription-first

  • 139: Professor Michael Platt connects neuroscience with brand choice and loyalty

    06/03/2019 Duration: 48min

    In this week's episode of "Marketing Today," Alan talks with Michael Platt, who is the James S. Riepe University Professor at the University of Pennsylvania. He also holds three professorships there: in marketing at the Wharton School; in neuroscience at the Perelman School of Medicine; and in psychology at the university's School of Arts and Sciences. In addition, he is the director of the Wharton Neuroscience Initiative.In the course of their discussion, Pratt talks at length about an article he co-authored with Leslie Zane, "Cracking the Code on Brand Growth," as well as a yet-to-be-published study regarding people's feelings about and affinities for their smartphones and how that relates to brand choice and loyalty.He also touches on the risks big brands face in not innovating, the even greater impact neuroscience will have in the future on marketing, advertising and design, and, last but not least, how his polymathic ways fuel his passion. "I'm very passionate about what I do; I'm very passiona

  • 138: Steve Lucas of Marketo discusses the 'Engagement Economy'

    27/02/2019 Duration: 52min

    This week on "Marketing Today," Alan talks with Steve Lucas, the former CEO of Marketo, which was acquired by Adobe in 2018. Now, Lucas is senior vice president of digital experience with Adobe as he continues to lead Marketo as an Adobe company. In addition, Lucas is the author of "Engage to Win: A Blueprint for Success in the Engagement Economy." In talking about the Engagement Economy, Lucas details the importance of attention and how it is expended. "In particular, attention is absolutely a currency in the Engagement Economy," says Lucas. "Because people, now more than ever, have a finite amount of attention to spend. No matter what you do – even if you never slept – you only have 24 hours of attention. It is a finite resource that we, as humans, have. So we have to carefully choose where we apply our attention." Lucas goes on to add, "And it is not just a belief, it’s an unequivocal assertion on my part, that people will spend that currency of attention on companies and brands that they believe align wit

  • 137: Professor Jan-Benedict Steenkamp on the impact of hard discounters

    20/02/2019 Duration: 43min

    This week on "Marketing Today," Alan talks with Jan-Benedict Steenkamp, who is the C. Knox Massey Distinguished Professor of Marketing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he has taught for 13 years. This is an encore performance on “Marketing Today” for Steenkamp. In Episode 40, he provided a master class in global branding.This time on the show, Steenkamp discusses his latest book, “Retail Disruptors: The Spectacular Rise and Impact of Hard Discounters,” which he co-authored with Laurens Sloot. Steenkamp describes the retail war taking place on the U.S. grocery landscape, where we're seeing insurgents like German chains Aldi and Lidl, as well as Trader Joe's, swooping in to take share from established U.S. grocers, particularly regional players. During the podcast, Steenkamp also touches on such topics as private labels, corporate social responsibility, and the future of Tesla.Highlights from this week's "Marketing Today" podcast include:Steenkamp discusses his motivation in writ

  • 136: Andrew Konya and his relentless pursuit of the truth

    13/02/2019 Duration: 36min

    This week on “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with Andrew Konya, CEO of Remesh, a company he co-founded in 2014 with the mission to create a technology that could truly represent the will of the people and amplify their collective voice. In that pursuit, Remesh uses AI to enable brands to engage with their audience quickly and more deeply to generate actionable insights, and, during the podcast, Konya is quite illustrative in discussing the methodologies that help Remesh accomplish that.In the course of their conversation, Konya again and again returns to something both he and his company value above all else: the truth. “It has become my obsession and now our company's obsession,” says Konya “to evaluate everything we do by this one simple question: ‘Does building this bring our customers closer to the truth?'"Highlights from this week's “Marketing Today” podcast include:From the laboratory to the boardroom: Konya talks about his background as a physicist and how

  • 135: Jason Jedlinski on the atomization of content

    06/02/2019 Duration: 38min

    In this week's episode of “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with Jason Jedlinski, senior vice president and head of consumer products for Gannett and the USA Today Network.Prior to joining Gannett and USA Today, Jedlinski spent seven years with the Tribune Company as well as serving a brief stint in the world of ad tech. In his current role, he is responsible for everything the consumer sees from Gannett and the USA Today brands.During the course of their discussion, Jedlinski addressed a number of topics, including his take on the monetization of content, the evolution of digital advertising, and what he means when he talks about the “atomization of content.”In speaking about the atomization of content, Jedlinski points out ways Gannett and USA Today endeavor to reach consumers with content they're curious about and can use. Not only that, he points out how the interactions consumers have with the content make it that much more vital. “It's really thinking about how we can leverage

  • 134: Jill Baskin’s new creative vision for Hershey

    30/01/2019 Duration: 35min

    This week on “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with Jill Baskin, CMO at the Hershey Company, where she's been for just over a year now. Previously, Baskin spent 20 years on the agency side before moving to the client side, joining Mondelēz International. There, she worked on brands like Oreo, Halls, Chips Ahoy! and Cadbury Chocolate.During the course of their discussion, Baskin talks about the reorganization at Hershey and her development of a small but nimble and effective in-house creative agency. And she also discusses the recent campaign work, “Heartwarming the World,” for the Hershey brand itself, what it's like to work with nontraditional partners, and her views on the future of the agency model.Baskin also talked about the impact creating Hershey's in-house agency has had on people at the company and their partners. “It brings an air of magic to brand management,” says Baskin. “It is so great for the organization. People are so excited by this, and so excited by be

  • 133: Cal Fussman on the art and power of asking great questions

    23/01/2019 Duration: 01h22min

    This week's “Marketing Today,” is an untraditional episode, but it's packed with insight, humor, compassion, and, yes, a marketing lesson or two. Alan sat down to talk with Cal Fussman, journalist, best-selling author, and writer at large for Esquire — where he has served as lead interviewer for the magazine's notable “What I've Learned” series. During the course of his career, he has interviewed and written about famous people from Jimmy Carter, Mikhail Gorbachev, and Ted Kennedy to Jack Welch, Al Pacino, and Muhammad Ali, as well as countless others. His personal essay, “Cocktails Before the Collapse,” written about his time as a sommelier at Windows on the World, the restaurant that sat perched atop the World Trade Center, won a James Beard Foundation Award in 2012.During the course of their conversation, Fussman touches on many of the powerful experiences and pivotal moments that shaped his life and career. But, perhaps most notably, it was his decision as a secon

  • 132: Siddarth Taparia and the creation of a transformational mindset at SAP

    16/01/2019 Duration: 29min

    This week on “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with Siddarth Taparia, senior vice president and head of marketing transformation at SAP, where his duties include overseeing partner marketing and strategic transformation.During the course of their discussion, Taparia talks about his 13-year career at SAP, including his transition to marketing. He also discusses the efforts by SAP to transform their brand — both internally and for its clients. In talking about that transformation, Taparia said, “I firmly believe that transformation starts and is successful with people. Everything else is an ingredient. But the thing that really makes it work is that the people have to transform — there has to be a transformational mindset.”He later added, “Any type of brand transformation is driven by how your customers perceive you, what they think about you, and how they champion your products and solutions.”Highlights from this week's “Marketing Today” podcast include:T

  • 131: Ryan Bonnici of G2 Crowd talks inbound marketing, content creation, and his motivation to succeed

    09/01/2019 Duration: 46min

    In this week's episode of “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with Ryan Bonnici, chief marketing officer for G2 Crowd. A self-admitted unconventional thinker, Bonnici started his career in an unconventional way — as an international flight attendant. But Bonnici used his time in the air to talk with the executives in first class and gain an understanding of the way they think. More importantly, a connection he made provided him with a conventional opportunity: a job at Microsoft.In addition to Microsoft, Bonnici has worked for companies like ExactTarget, Salesforce, HubSpot, and now with G2 Crowd. In this freewheeling and frank conversation, Bonnici reveals some of the decisions he's made — that have paid off big — and the thinking behind them. And like a lot of successful marketers, Bonnici believes in taking chances, even if you don't always succeed: “The best way to learn,” say Bonnici, “is just to do and to fail — and to learn from that.” Highligh

  • 130: Kristi Argyilan of Target zeroes in on Gen Z

    02/01/2019 Duration: 27min

    “Marketing Today with Alan Hart” once again comes to you from Brooklyn, where it was recorded during the Incite Group's Brand Marketing Summit, which took place in October of 2018. This week's episode features a conversation with Kristi Argyilan, who is a senior VP with Target, where she is in charge of media, guest relations, and measurement. She also leads strategic partnerships with media companies like Google, Facebook, Pinterest, and NBCUniversal as well as with Target's agency partners Mother, Deutsch LA, GroupM's Essence, among others.During the course of the podcast, Argyilan kept returning to the importance of the relationship Target is fostering with Gen Z, which includes partnerships with influencers, the creation and use of video in social media, and members of Gen Z pitching business ideas to Target through its incubator program. “We're really leaning in on this idea of marketing becoming commerce,” says Argyilan. And we're pushing that technology in whatever way we can.” She goes on to add:

  • 129: Marketing Today at the Brand Marketing Summit in Brooklyn

    26/12/2018 Duration: 21min

    This week finds “Marketing Today” on the road again. This time the destination was Brooklyn and the Incite Group's Brand Marketing Summit, where Alan Hart moderated a track — Customer Understanding and Personalized Experiences — and took the opportunity to talk with some of the marketers there about their brands: what was top of mind for them, key insights they had about the Brand Marketing Summit, and their thoughts on the customer journey and experience. They also talked about sources they turned to for information, the best pieces of advice they've received, and even things they love and hate. The four marketers Alan spoke with are:Michael Blash, chief commercial officer at Ink BenchAlegra O'Hare, VP of global brand communications at adidasCasey Hall, former director of social media at Thompson ReutersAbinav Varma, president and CEO at UNIBEESHighlights from this week's “Marketing Today” podcast include:Michael Blash describes Ink Bench as a company that is “b

  • 128: Mary Ann Reilly of Visa on sponsorships, innovation, and branding

    19/12/2018 Duration: 22min

    Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/marketingtodaySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Become a member today and visit https://plus.acast.com/s/marketingtoday. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  • 127: Bob Hoffman: The Ad Contrarian Strikes Again

    12/12/2018 Duration: 32min

    In this week's episode of “Marketing Today,” it's déjà vu all over again. Bob Hoffman, The Ad Contrarian, returns for his third visit on the podcast. Bob and Alan can't decide if it's a case of the third time being a charm or if it's three strikes and you're out. In any case, it's a treat for the listener because Hoffman is, as always, blunt, profane, and hilarious —and he takes no prisoners.During the course of his conversation with Alan, Hoffman talks about the state of advertising as he sees it, his recent contribution to “Eat Your Greens,” published by the APG as part of their 50 Years of Planning celebration, his take on Facebook, and his new book, “Laughing@Advertising.” The book is a compilation of articles from Hoffman's blog, The Ad Contrarian, and Hoffman describes it as “the silliest, most injudicious and, perhaps, irresponsible marketing book you've ever read.”But we all know that really means the book is filled in equal measure w

  • 126: George Hammer of IBM on what it means to make less and matter more

    05/12/2018 Duration: 33min

    In this week's episode of “Marketing Today,” Alan talks with George Hammer, chief content officer at IBM. In his conversation with Alan, Hammer discusses current trends in content creation as well as his vision for the way IBM operates in the creative realm and how it has changed “business as usual” at IBM.Hammer talks about the current trend we're seeing of so many companies bringing create in-house and how the content creation model at IBM — “IBM Originals” — is different. “I believe that we can actually do better,” says Hammer. “And so, for me, no — we're not building an in-house agency. And I think if you just simply think about that, you're missing the opportunity to do something bigger and greater. And there are all sorts of opportunities that are unlocked when you have an IBMer sitting next to an IBMer working together to make something.”At the same time, Hammer recognizes what outside talent can add to the IBM mix: “Th

  • 125: Kim Wijkstrom believes brand is key in the strategic growth of a company

    28/11/2018 Duration: 30min

    This week's episode of “Marketing Today,” finds Alan talking with Kim Wijkstrom, CMO for OneMain Financial. In his role there, Wijkstrom is responsible for development and execution of the company's brand marketing, and he has overseen OneMain Financial's first-ever brand campaign: “Lending Done Human.”During the course of his discussion with Alan, Wijkstrom talks at length about what led him to join OneMain Financial, his belief that the company provides a necessary and responsible service, and the company's new brand campaign. He also revisits his time at TBWA Chiat Day, where he worked on some of the world's most iconic brands, including Apple and Absolut Vodka.Working on Apple set the tone for Wijkstrom's career. “I don't think, at the time, I realized how lucky I was to be thrown into that situation,” says Wijkstrom. “It was more trying to absorb as much as possible from the moment and roll with it and make sure that we could deliver on the relationship.” H

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