Tuesday, July 31, 2012

GM Fires Marketing Chief For Soccer Deal, Then Signs It

One day after  GM's  Chief Marketing Executive Joel Ewanick was fired for failing " to meet the expectations that the company has for its employees," one day after it was leaked like from a fire hose that there were shady going ons between Ewanick and the Manchester United soccer club, GM signed a seven year contract with just the same soccer club. A day after the ouster of a marketing chief who was tasked with saving billions, GM paid, according to Reuters,  "twice as much as the team's previous automotive sponsor" for putting "Chevrolet" on the team's jerseys. Does this pass the smell test?

Officially, no reason is given for Ewanick's ouster, except for the both mean-spirited and hamfisted not meeting of expectations. Unofficially, dirt is being thrown after Ewanick.

"Sources" told Reuters that "Ewanick didn't properly report financial details about the jersey deal." In the business, those anonymous sources are nearly always inside the company, and in 9 out of ten cases, the source is a company spokesman who prefaced what he said to the reporter with a "don't quote me on that, but …"

Other sources, this time "some industry officials" (code for people outside of the company) don't buy the story:

"While GM would not discuss Ewanick's departure, some industry officials said a deal as big as the Manchester United sponsorship agreements would have been signed by multiple executives. They also raised the possibility that GM simply wanted to dump Ewanick as the automaker's U.S. market share has declined by nearly 2 points in the first half of 2012 compared with the year before to 18.1 percent."

I don't know how they do it at GM, but at every large corporation I know, the CEO is intimately involved in the decision and deal making that precedes a major sponsorship deal.   The CEO would be involved even more so when the company pays twice the going rate.

Oh, and what about the improper dealings? "The wording of the affected deal terms was changed before the deal was made public on Monday," a source that was "not authorized to discuss contract details" (code: insider for sure) told Reuters.

I don't know how they do it at GM, but at every large corporation I know, if there is a deal with an impropriety huge enough to fire the marketing chief, that deal won't get signed, and the police will get called instead.

We have yet to know for what marketing disaster Ewanick was fired. The much bigger PR disaster stares us right into the eye.

 



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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