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Kent, , United Kingdom
Marketing Executive / £30,000 - £35,000 / Dartford, Kent / Permanent
Our client, a leading company in their industry, is seeking a dynamic Marketing Executive to join their fast-growing team on a permanent basis.
About You:
You’re a proactive marketing professional with at least 2 years of experience in a generalist marketing role, looking for your next big challenge. You thrive in collaborative environments, have excellent communication skills, and are eager to make an impact.
As a Marketing Executive, you’ll play a key role in shaping and executing marketing strategies to drive brand success.
Your responsibilities will include:
Collaborating with the marketing team, PR, and design agencies to create impactful promotional materials within budget and deadlines.
Partnering with product managers to support the launch of new product lines.
Crafting engaging content for internal emails, social media, and communication channels in collaboration with PR agencies.
Assisting in the execution and promotion of marketing strategies and campaigns.
What You Bring:
A minimum of 2 years’ experience in a generalist marketing role
Previous experience working in a B2B environment
Previous experience working with agencies (preferred)
Exceptional written and verbal communication skills
Proficiency in Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook)
The Perks:
Competitive salary: £30,000 - £35,000 (with some flexibility for the right candidate)
1 day working from home following successful probation
Monday – Friday, 8am – 5pm
22 days of holiday
Discretionary annual bonus – up to7.5%
Marketing Executive / £30,000 - £35,000 / Dartford, Kent / Permanent
Slangs & AI meanings
when a crack dealer delivers an extra rock as a marketing ploy
When a crack dealer delivers an extra rock as a marketing ploy to attract customers
A worktime game where you take a crossword grid, and try to fill rows or columns from a table filled with the buzzwords you hear at the meeting, by marking the words when they are used. In addition the rule sais you should shout 'buzzword' when you achieved a complete row or column - but this is also seen as a good way to be retrenched.
n bent bit of wire intended to collect radio waves for your computer, television or some such device. The manufacturers don’t call them bent bits of wire. Their marketing chaps have many fancy words like “impedance” and “gain,” but back at the factory all the guys are just bending wire. Americans call these devices “antennas,” though aerial is in limited use in the U.S., too.
When a crack dealer delivers an extra rock as a marketing ploy to attract customers
adj. "Shimano Total Integration" - a marketing ploy that forces you to buy new brakes when you replace your shifters.
Special marking, positioned amidships, that indicates the draft of the vessel and the legal limit to which the vessel may be loaded for specific water types and temperatures.
A night-time navigational aid that consists of two lights in a line marking a channel. The correct course to steer to get through the channel is an extension of a line formed by the lights. Usually the front range light is the lower of the two, and nearer to the mariner using the range. The rear light is higher and further from the mariner. All a mariner has to do is keep the lines in line, with the rear light directly on top of the front light, and they can assume that they are safely in the middle of the channel.
Green marketing is slang for the efforts of corporations to convince the public that their products are environmentally friendly and that they are ecologically committed on a global scale.
Marketing ploy to attract rather than repel customers. Is an acronym for "buy one, get one free".
Targeting of an enemy contact with radar, especially for weapons guidance purposes.
A vile term intended for use in a company's marketing division to demonstrate how it strives to be proactive, working to future proof the company by introduction and implementation of paradigms designed to ensure market needs are set and met for the consumer of tomorrow as well as that of today. (ed: I can't believe I wrote that... it's horrible!)
Marketing Executive
when a crack dealer delivers an extra rock as a marketing ploy
When a crack dealer delivers an extra rock as a marketing ploy to attract customers
A worktime game where you take a crossword grid, and try to fill rows or columns from a table filled with the buzzwords you hear at the meeting, by marking the words when they are used. In addition the rule sais you should shout 'buzzword' when you achieved a complete row or column - but this is also seen as a good way to be retrenched.
n bent bit of wire intended to collect radio waves for your computer, television or some such device. The manufacturers don’t call them bent bits of wire. Their marketing chaps have many fancy words like “impedance” and “gain,” but back at the factory all the guys are just bending wire. Americans call these devices “antennas,” though aerial is in limited use in the U.S., too.
When a crack dealer delivers an extra rock as a marketing ploy to attract customers
adj. "Shimano Total Integration" - a marketing ploy that forces you to buy new brakes when you replace your shifters.
Special marking, positioned amidships, that indicates the draft of the vessel and the legal limit to which the vessel may be loaded for specific water types and temperatures.
A night-time navigational aid that consists of two lights in a line marking a channel. The correct course to steer to get through the channel is an extension of a line formed by the lights. Usually the front range light is the lower of the two, and nearer to the mariner using the range. The rear light is higher and further from the mariner. All a mariner has to do is keep the lines in line, with the rear light directly on top of the front light, and they can assume that they are safely in the middle of the channel.
Green marketing is slang for the efforts of corporations to convince the public that their products are environmentally friendly and that they are ecologically committed on a global scale.
Marketing ploy to attract rather than repel customers. Is an acronym for "buy one, get one free".
Targeting of an enemy contact with radar, especially for weapons guidance purposes.
A vile term intended for use in a company's marketing division to demonstrate how it strives to be proactive, working to future proof the company by introduction and implementation of paradigms designed to ensure market needs are set and met for the consumer of tomorrow as well as that of today. (ed: I can't believe I wrote that... it's horrible!)
Marketing Executive
A chief marketing officer (CMO), also called a chief brand officer (CBO), is a C-suite corporate executive responsible for managing marketing activities
Marketing management is the strategic organizational discipline that focuses on the practical application of marketing orientation, techniques and methods
Arthur) is an American-Ghanaian businessperson and marketing executive who was the chief marketing officer (CMO) at Netflix from August 2020 to March
blɑ̃]; born 9 April 1963) is a French general manager and former marketing executive of Paris Saint-Germain and former CEO of Juventus. Blanc is the CEO
his promotion to president and COO, Fils-Aimé was executive vice president of sales and marketing. Fils-Aimé gained celebrity status among gamers following
"Sonny" Vaccaro (born September 23, 1939) is an American former sports marketing executive. He lives in Santa Monica, California. Vaccaro is best known for
Jack Christopher Stamp Brooksbank (born 3 May 1986) is a British marketing executive who is married to Princess Eugenie, a niece of King Charles III.
Oluwadara Johnson Treseder is a Nigerian-born marketing executive, raised in Ibadan. She graduated cum laude from Harvard University, where she received
1970), also known as "Shingy", is an Australian marketing executive. He held various senior marketing positions at AOL between 2007 and 2019. David Shing
market research statistics for decision makers, such as, marketing directors, chief executive officer, who were not necessarily well acquainted with computers