Johnny Russo

Shaping the Ecommerce, Digital Marketing, Social Media Landscape

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An Often Overlooked Aspect of Being a Great Manager

April 13, 2018 by Johnny Russo Leave a Comment

An Often Overlooked Aspect of Being a Great Manager

Most people start their careers, and after a year or two, they dream of being a boss. They want to be a Manager. They want to lead and mentor a team. And everyone believes they will be good at managing a team. And at the beginning of your career, you may even think it looks easy. After all, you communicate great with your friends and colleagues, how hard can leading people be?

This blog post won’t cover all the aspects that make a great (or bad) Manager, but it will cover one very important one. Be responsive.

Time Management Can Be a Key Driver in Being Responsive

See, here’s the thing. Usually, when you become a Manager, you have more responsibilities which means you have to manage your time better. If you don’t do a good job of managing your time, you will either: A. Always have to play catch up at night or on the weekends or B. Always leave your team looking for answers because you’re not being responsive to their questions and/or needs.

If you take on the responsibility of being a Manager – remember, this is a big step in your career – you’re being given employees whom leadership expects you to mentor, coach, mold, help, and maybe most importantly, they expect you to get them to get shit done. Meaning if you are a Manager, you cannot be a bottleneck. You cannot keep your team waiting for answers – unanswered emails, texts, or calls, and a lack of timely decision-making will surely not move the needle, and then you may lose respect amongst your team. You also need to make time for them. Even if you’re wrapped up in meetings all day, that’s no excuse. Take them for a coffee. Have breakfast with them. Stay late to talk with them. Make time for them.

And this does not go only for new Managers. This is even more crucial for senior Managers and senior leaders, as you have even more responsibility, pressure, and probably more issues to tackle.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Lead, Leadership, Transform Tagged With: Coaching, Johnny Russo, Leader, Leadership, Manager, Managing, Mentoring, Perfection, Personal Development, Responsive, Team, Time Management

Why I Don’t Want To Be a Perfectionist Ever Again

April 5, 2018 by Johnny Russo 2 Comments

Why I Don’t Want To Be a Perfectionist Ever Again

I used to be a perfectionist. Maybe it’s the fact I was in journalism, which is drenched in facts, solid sources, grammar, and trying to never make an error. But early on in my career, I would try and craft the perfect marketing communication, the perfect PR release, the perfect blog post, the immaculate About Us page, the spotless product description, and even the perfect internal email. I would fret over proper grammar (ok, I still do that sometimes), the use of a colon or semi colon, where to put a comma, how many spaces to put between words and paragraphs. I would re-read something and change the tiniest of things, and then wait another day or week to publish and push out work in case I wanted to make more changes. I would ensure each shadow of each product we photographed was 100% perfect. Editing would take a little extra with all the minute changes needed. When you get down to those details, the minutiae, it can all be subjective.

What’s Your Greatest Weakness?

You know when you interview you for a job and the interviewer asks you the question about “what’s your greatest weakness?” or “what do you most need to improve upon?” I would always give the “I tend to be a perfectionist, so some things take longer to complete” answer. I thought it was a decent “negative” response to give. But it’s one I can give no more.

Over the last few years or so, I’ve realized that I would rather get to 80% or 90% of really good, in everything I do, than wait for perfection. I think it makes my life easier, and I think those on my team, past and present, would agree (I can see them nodding as they read this).

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Digital Marketing, Leadership Tagged With: Digital Marketing, Digital Transformation, Johnny Russo, Leadership, Manager, Marketing, Perfection, Personal Development

My Blog Is Changing, Because I Have Changed – My Blog Manifesto

March 24, 2018 by Johnny Russo 3 Comments

My Blog Is Changing, Because I Have Changed – My Blog Manifesto

 

More than 3 years ago, I started a blog. I have a Journalism degree, so it was not that hard. I probably should have started one 10 years earlier, but I guess I thought I didn’t have anything interesting to say, which is kind of odd for a marketer, right? As I developed my career – and more importantly, gained new life experiences that have helped me grow – I started gaining a voice. And I wanted an outlet to share that voice. And over the years, that voice has grown and continues to grow. And since I advocate strongly against the status quo, I thought it was time I changed this blog and what it will stand for.

Currently (or at least in the recent past), my blog is/was focused on writing about Ecommerce, Digital Marketing and Social Media. I currently publish about once per month. Posts range from 1,500-2,500 words. Many posts have a lot of research attached to them. But I read a lot of books, blogs, and articles, network a ton, learn from mentors and mentees, and have opinions I’d like to share, more often. However, in the current context of my blog, it does not necessarily fit with the 3 main pillars of Ecommerce, Digital Marketing, and Social Media – though it usually does tie back to them in one way or another for sure.

Helping People Has Become A Passion

I also have a love of helping people, and topics surrounding leadership, inspiration, motivation, transformation, and retail that I have trouble intertwining within my blog as it currently lives. Also, I would rather share my experience and thoughts and feelings, than spend so much time researching posts to write about.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Ecommerce, Leadership Tagged With: Branding, Culture, Digital Marketing, Digital Transformation, Inspiration, Johnny Russo, Leadership, Marketing, Motivation, Personal Branding, Personal Development, Retail, Social Media, Technology, Transformation

The Changing Role of the Marketer

February 11, 2018 by Johnny Russo 1 Comment

The Changing Role of the Marketer

On February 5, the Calgary Marketing Association held a panel discussion on The Changing Role of the Marketer. The CMA, for which I sit on the Board of Directors, asked me to participate and to think of the impacts the new Marketing landscape is having on employees new to the workforce, mid-level employees, and also senior level employees. The panel also included Suelyn Howe from Bing, Ryan Gill from Communo, and Vincent Duckworth from The ViTreo Group.

This blog post contains my thoughts on the changing role of the Marketer. It’s an exciting, ever-changing period, and hopefully readers can take bits and pieces of this and make it make sense in their day-to-day professional careers.

These views expressed are my own, and do not represent the views of the CMA or my currently employer in any way. They also represent forward-looking statements.

1. How has the role of the marketer changed in the past 5 years?

Are Marketers now technologists? Can you be successful without a pretty fluent knowledge of how technology and digital and data work together? In my opinion, you can’t.

I still think Marketing is the correct term. I don’t think we need to change that. But without a solid understanding of technology and digital, I don’t think Marketers can succeed over the course of the next 2 years or so. Marketers may struggle to find work, struggle to get ahead, struggle to lead. The most successful Marketers of the future will tie branding, technology, media, data, and creativity together to win.

2. Is there one thing in the Marketing realm, over the past 5 years for example, that you absolutely did not see coming?

Being in the Retail industry, I think 5 years ago, I would have said invest in Ecommerce and your online channels, and let the strong stores in your network  survive, and kill off the weaker ones. But now, I think you need a strong store network in order to survive online; look at Indocino, Amazon, and Tesla – all using stores to cater to an experience, and to help their Omni Channel brand. Think of a simple thing like returns. If you have a store near your house, think how easy it is to return an online order, free of charge, and get your refund right away. Look at how Indocino and Tesla use their showroom (i.e. store). Very little product, but tons of customer experience.

Another thing that, while it has not surprised me, but is happening: generalists seem to be in need now more than ever. It seems to have shifted from, for example, Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Specialists and Analytics Specialists, to teams being made up of Optimization Specialists – those people that know a touch of everything and have a well-rounded knowledge of the business. As budgets get tighter, companies will expect fewer employees to do the job of many. So I think generalists will become in need more than ever. (P.S. I have a bias on that, as I am a generalist).

3. What do you predict will happen in the next 5 to 10 years?

I think Marketing will be in-sourced rather than outsourced. And what I mean by that is that internal teams will be built and will be stronger than agencies, or at the very least, have an equal skill set, making it more efficient to run everything in-house. For example, with programmatic media, it’s a good example of where technology exists that could take power away from agencies and into the hands of internal marketers. Young people (i.e. millennials) are smarter and smarter and want to affect change in meaningful ways.

I also think about these 2 terms – Agile and Action: If Marketers are not working in an agile manner, they will not win. The day of setting marketing up and planning a year in advance and walking away no longer exist – there is no more set it and forget it. Marketers have to be agile, ship their product and service, even at 80% complete, and allow user generated feedback to provide input for a future release. (I am not just talking about technology product releases here – this could be products and services like marketing campaigns, consulting services, t-shirts, shoes, fitness watches, books, teaching courses, influencer campaigns, blogs. etc)

And a final point on this question, but Marketers must embrace technology. All Marketers need not be computer geeks. But all (let me repeat: ALL) Marketers better embrace technology at the core of what they are doing, or be left behind by those that do. And I mean really embrace it, not just read a blog post and say you understand it.

4. What do you think is the biggest challenge for Marketers at the moment?

There is too much out there – so many distractions, so many “motivational” speakers and Instagram influencers and podcasts that have Marketers telling you what to do. It can give you a headache and along the way, you may find yourself back at the start. You can’t take what everyone says and run with it, because you will get lost. So I think the biggest challenge Marketers face is prioritizing the information that is pertinent for their career or role, and trying it out.

Gary Vaynerchuk is a great example. I love Gary Vee. But you can’t take everything he says and make it work for you because you’ll go nuts. You have to take it with a grain of salt and take what you want to accomplish first. (Besides, I don’t think Gary Vee ever sleeps with the amount of amazing content he puts out).

But Gary Vee said something interesting a few weeks back. He said he hopes people who have listened to him for a while stop, because that would mean they have taken his inspirational advice and teaching and have then done something with it and don’t need to rely on him anymore. I thought that was so interesting, valuable and true.

5. What are the most critical changes that we as Marketers must make to face the future effectively?

Be a change agent. Disruption and transformation are words you hear quite often in today’s Marketing landscape. To succeed, everyone in Marketing needs to be a change agent. The pace of change has never been this fast, and it will never be this slow again. Read that over again: The pace of change has never been this fast, and it will never be this slow again. So for me, if you’re someone who does not embrace change, you may struggle in tomorrow’s Marketing environment. Correct that: you will struggle.

6. What effect has technology had in the role of the marketer?

The four main ones for me are payments, advancements in mobile, data, and voice.

Payments: Think of 10-15 years ago and all you could use was cash and credit card. Now PayPal, Square, Apple Pay, Amazon Payments, dare I say Bitcoin. The way we pay has been disrupted, with no slowdown in site.

Mobile: Probably the biggest impact, and why most sites now have more than 50% of visitor traffic coming from mobile, has been optimizations in that field. And it will continue as networks get stronger, and phone providers wisen up in regards to data and usage, and brands get better at making changes to their mobile experience. Has any brand or Marketer not had to think of mobile and how it affects their customers? I think it would be hard to find an example of that.

Data: Easy access to data can make everyone a Marketing scientist. We have no excuse to win more often. Think of sports’ use of data. How many more data points does the National Hockey League (NHL) use now, compared to just 5 years ago? Whereas before it was goals, assists, points, plus/minus, shots, and time on ice, scouts and executives now review hundreds of stats to predict when players are on a decline in their careers, when they should be traded or obtained, when shifts are poor, quality shots in the offensive zone, and when players should be put on waivers.

Voice/SmartHome: How will Marketers adapt to the importance of voice? This is crucial for the next 2 years.

7. Who do you feel is making the greatest advancements in these new Marketing roles, and what are they doing?

Entrepreneurs (and/or start-up founders) may be the single greatest Marketers right now. Think about it: they come up with the product or service, they launch it, they create the website, they market it, and they sell it, and to top it all off, they then service the customer and make sure they’re happy. I think Entrepreneurs are the greatest Marketers right now, whether they succeed or fail in their endeavour.

8. What is one piece of practical advice you would give to a Marketer who is early in their career or starting out?

Read, network, and be curious. To stay ahead of your competitors – and your peers – you need to research, read, launch, fail, learn, and do it all over again. Leaders are everywhere. Forget your title and forget the hierarchy. Everyone can be a leader. You don’t need a title to lead Marketing anymore.

Here’s an immediate action for you: take 1-3 items from every book you read and work on it o practice it. For example, if you read a book on communication about dealing with difficult people and you read it and don’t try it out on your Manager or someone that is difficult to deal with…is it really helping? Prioritize a few action items from each book or blog you read.

9. What is one piece of practical advice you would give to a mid-level Marketer who is looking to advance as far and as quickly as they can?

Don’t pay much attention to title, status, what your former classmates’ title is on LinkedIn or what your friends are making in terms of salary. Gain your knowledge and experience. If you want to be a future leader, and you have the knowledge that comes with the positon, you will also garner the respect of your peers (and the future team you will lead). Knowledge is more important than title at this stage in your career. If you chase a title, say you want to be a Manager so bad by 25 or 26 years of age, and then you become one and lead a team of 4; you will gain their respect so much more if you are a solid listener with a solid knowledge base. You don’t need to know as much as they do, but you need to understand their challenges on a day-to-day basis. Imagine they come to you and say I can’t get this done because of such and such. Rather than simply saying “well get it done, I’m your Manager.” You can look at the challenge and help them find a solution, and maybe they’re right – maybe the challenge is too big for that deadline. And you can work with them to help them.

I always say, chase a mentor, not a title.

 

Marketing today is not easy. But it is extremely fun for those who love taking on challenges and coming up with solutions for them. Take advantage of the pace of change and be a superstar in the Marketing field.

Filed Under: Digital Marketing, Leadership Tagged With: Branding, Culture, Digital Marketing, Digital Transformation, Education, Johnny Russo, Leadership, Marketing, Retail, Technology

Customer Contact Week Speaker Series Q&A

November 4, 2017 by Johnny Russo Leave a Comment

Customer Contact Week Speaker Series

Customer Contact Week gathers leaders that span the customer journey, from Marketing to Operations to Customer Care. CCW talked with me and two other leaders speaking at CCW NoLa to discuss some of the keys to delivering great customer experience, challenges on the journey, and the personal meaning of world-class service with speed and efficiency.

Download the entire Customer Contact Week Speaker Series Q&A or you can also find it on the Customer Contact Week Digital site.

Here is my interview in its entirety:

Question: Our CCW New Orleans theme this year is focused on delivering world-class service with speed and efficiency.  In the context of your work, what does speed and efficiency for the customer mean to you?

Answer: For me, it’s about speed and agility in servicing the customer’s needs. That could come in the form of how quickly we respond to an issue; how efficient we are at solving it at first touch – while remaining consistent with our brand tone, yet still with a personal human touch, independent of channel (stores, online, social, call center, etc); it’s also the speed of shipping out an order as quickly as possible.

On the Digital Marketing side, we like to try new things. We don’t love mass communication (who does?) we like relevant communication. From the digital media we buy, to the preference center we launched (enabling newsletter subscribers to opt down in frequency of email received), we don’t want to inundate our customers with our shopping messages. We’re also trying to be better at communicating non-sale messages, and focusing more on pairing up looks, new site features that make the browsing experience better, or our Click & Collect solutions.

Q: Tell us a little more about your speaking role at CCW New Orleans and how it relates back to your current focus areas.  What makes you passionate about this topic?

A: This session might be a bit different, since my title or position is not necessarily Customer Service or Customer Experience. However, leading the Digital Marketing and Ecommerce team for one of the largest apparel retailers in Canada, we obsess about customer needs. So I believe my session will touch not only how to do things for the buying customer, but also your internal team members (think about it, they are your customers as well), not to mention our external vendors or agencies; they are an extension of our team, and so we refer to them as our partners (again, they are customers as well in the broader sense).

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Leadership, Social Media Tagged With: CCW, CCW Nola, Culture, Customer Care, Customer Contact Week, Customer Experience, Customer Service, Digital Marketing, Digital Transformation, Ecommerce, Education, Johnny Russo, Leadership, Retail, Team

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I have been following blogs for over 15 years. I have also written blog posts for many of the companies I have worked for. So it only made sense that I finally (yes, I said finally) made the plunge and launched my own blog in 2015. So what … Read More

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I have 13+ years experience in the Retail, Start-up, Technology, and Manufacturing industries. I have led growth and strategies in Ecommerce, Digital Marketing, Marketing, Branding Social Media, Mobile, and Omni-Channel … Read More

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Working as the Vice President of Marketing & Ecommerce at The Kersheh Group, an apparel retailer and manufacturer that specializes predominately in kids sleepwear. The Kersheh Group manufactures and markets sleepwear for boys, girls, adults, and the entire family. Our cozy, … Read More

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