Mattel UK restructure splits head role in two

Mattel UK has split its marketing director role into two “business unit managers” – a move that appears to downgrade the importance of marketing at the toy company.

Sara Reader and Simon Waldron, both experienced sales and marketing employees at Mattel UK, have been promoted to the roles, filling the vacuum left by the departure of former marketing director David Allmark (MW August 23, 2001).

The unusual job title mirrors Mattel’s US marketing department structure, according to a spokeswoman. Mattel UK has been run for the past year by Mattel UK general manager Eugene Murtha, a former head of marketing at Mattel US.

Mattel UK says nothing should be inferred from its decision not to replace Allmark directly. “We’re a big company now, so it makes sense to split the role,” says the spokeswoman.

Murtha says: “In our search for a marketing director it soon became clear that we had two exceptional candidates within the company, [both of whom] had the wealth of experience and existing knowledge of the business to take on the role of running the marketing department between them.”

Last year, he says, was the company’s best to date in the UK market, thanks to licensed properties such as Harry Potter, Winnie the Pooh and Blue Clues, as well as new launches What’s Her Face and Miracle Baby. Mattel’s core brands – Barbie, Fisher-Price and Hot Wheels – also enjoyed a “phenomenal” year.

Recommended

House of Lords vetoes amendment to tobacco advertising legislation

Marketing Week

Members of the House of Lords have vetoed a proposed amendment to the Tobacco Advertising and Promotion Private Members Bill, which, if left in, could have lead to the Bill being scrapped six years after its introduction. The amendment, made by three members of the Lords, proposed that if a ban on tobacco advertising failed […]

Niall produces food for thought

Marketing Week

Belying its dry-as-dust name, the City Food Lecture, given last week at London’s Guildhall, proved a surprisingly riveting affair. Not because it was packed with luminaries from the food industry, such as Sainsbury’s Sir Peter Davis – although it was. But because of a far from academic interest in some of its content, together with […]