- David Gianatasio, Adweek
Computer giant Dell today said its chief marketing officer, Mark
Jarvis, would exit this fiscal quarter, to be succeeded by Erin
Nelson, who has been vp of marketing for Dell's operations in
Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
In a statement, the company said Jarvis would "provide ongoing
counsel to Dell through the consulting business that brought him to
the company."
Dell said Jarvis' impending departure follows his "transformation
of Dell's marketing organization, including revitalizing the brand
and instilling new levels of marketing effectiveness and
efficiency." No other rationale was given.
The move comes slightly more than one year after
Dell tapped WPP Group for global
marketing services following a review. WPP outpaced Interpublic
Group in the final round. Dell, based in Round Rock, Texas, spends
an estimated $700 million annually on global advertising.
WPP spent much of this year forming and staffing
Enfatico, a dedicated integrated marketing and
communications firm to handle Dell's business worldwide. Former
Digitas executive Torrence Boone was named Enfatico's CEO in
May.
A Dell rep today said Jarvis' exit would have "no effect on our
partnership with Enfatico."
The global consolidation move and Enfatico itself have come under
derision from some marketing bloggers and columnists, as the
team-up has been slow to generate significant campaigns.
Jarvis' departure is part of a broader Dell restructuring that will
see Michael Cannon, president of global operations, depart. Both
joined Dell in 2007.
Jarvis becomes the second high-ranking marketer--and key decision
maker in last year's review--to exit Dell in recent weeks,
following the departure of domestic marketing vp Casey Jones in
November.
The company has been caught up in the economic slump with its Q3
revenue declining 3 percent overall. Dell cut about 2,200 jobs
during that quarter.
CMO Jarvis Leaving Dell
Dec 31, 2008
- David Gianatasio, Adweek
Computer giant Dell today said its chief marketing officer, Mark Jarvis, would exit this fiscal quarter, to be succeeded by Erin Nelson, who has been vp of marketing for Dell's operations in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
In a statement, the company said Jarvis would "provide ongoing counsel to Dell through the consulting business that brought him to the company."
Dell said Jarvis' impending departure follows his "transformation of Dell's marketing organization, including revitalizing the brand and instilling new levels of marketing effectiveness and efficiency." No other rationale was given.
The move comes slightly more than one year after
Dell tapped WPP Group for global marketing services following a review. WPP outpaced Interpublic Group in the final round. Dell, based in Round Rock, Texas, spends an estimated $700 million annually on global advertising.
WPP spent much of this year forming and staffing
Enfatico, a dedicated integrated marketing and communications firm to handle Dell's business worldwide. Former Digitas executive Torrence Boone was named Enfatico's CEO in May.
A Dell rep today said Jarvis' exit would have "no effect on our partnership with Enfatico."
The global consolidation move and Enfatico itself have come under derision from some marketing bloggers and columnists, as the team-up has been slow to generate significant campaigns.
Jarvis' departure is part of a broader Dell restructuring that will see Michael Cannon, president of global operations, depart. Both joined Dell in 2007.
Jarvis becomes the second high-ranking marketer--and key decision maker in last year's review--to exit Dell in recent weeks, following the departure of domestic marketing vp Casey Jones in November.
The company has been caught up in the economic slump with its Q3 revenue declining 3 percent overall. Dell cut about 2,200 jobs during that quarter.