As seen in IN MERCHANDISING The 200-plus individuals listed in this section have been identified as notable figures at their respective companies that represent leading brands and retailers within the global merchandising community. Their continued achievements have earned them inclusion among this latest installment of our Who’s Who series, which recognizes the top performers in shopper marketing, digital shopper marketing, insights and merchandising. 7-Eleven Inc. American Express n Tom Burkemper, Senior n Suzanne Burg, Senior Manager, Director, Merchandising Burkemper’s responsibilities include leadership for 7-Eleven’s merchandising initiatives for energy and functional beverages, coffee, juices and other beverages in the U.S. His more than 20 years of experience includes roles within the CPG, pharmaceuticals and beverage industries. Marketing & Communications Burg focuses on communications for the small merchant segment, including P-O-P signage placement and cardmember engagement for marketing efforts such as Small Business Saturday and digital offers. American Greetings Corp. n Rebecca Frechette, VP, Merchandising Frechette has been VP of merchandising for 7-Eleven since 2012, leading all aspects of the center of store, services and private brands businesses. She builds and executes strategies and solutions for a broad range of businesses, including candy, snacks, health and beauty, general merchandise, wireless phones, prepaid cards, lottery and tobacco, and also leads all product development for 7-Eleven’s private brands. ACCO Brands n Chris Cunningham, Global Design Director n Gary Lazicki, U.S. Marketing, Retail Merchandising Manager Lazicki uses category management and researchbased brand strategies to activate merchandising platforms across office product categories. n Ryan Tesiero, Senior Leader, Visual Display & Merchandising Ace Hardware n Mike Berschauer, Director, Retail Operations n Lorne Cohen, Group Category Manager, Consumer Insights & Shopper Marketing n Elyse Sanneman, Store Design & Planning Manager, Retail Development Advance Auto Parts Inc. n Kevin Conniff, Director, Inventory Management and Visual Merchandising Brown-Forman Corp. n David Dorsey, VP, Director, Global Licensing & Sales Promotion Burt’s Bees n Spencer M. Blaker, Global Director, Retail Marketing and Experience Apple Computer Inc. n Rachael Weiss, Retail Merchandising Manager n Theresa McDonald, Merchandising Manager n Tiffany Pieja, POP Merchandising Manager Asics America Corp. n Sarah Booth, Director of Retail Marketing n Casey Nolter, Director of Retail Avery Products Corp. n Kimberly True, Director, Visual Merchandising A Manager n Don Batson, Director of Retail Design n Rob Chumley, VP, Retail/Business Innovation n Eric Green, Global Display Category B Bayer HealthCare n Ben Barra, Manager, Merchandising Services Beam Global Spirits & Wine n Jim Dionne, Senior Manager, Marketing Procurement Dionne leads the Americas marketing procurement team, providing direction for effective category management of Beam’s marketing spend including agencies, media, print, POS, display logistics and warehousing. n Jeanette Koklamanis, Senior Purchasing Agent C Campbell Soup/Pepperidge Farm n Susan Bell, Director, In-Store Merchandising, Pepperidge Farm Bell leads the in-store merchandising team at Pepperidge Farm, which partners with sales and marketing to deliver merchandising vehicles for customers. n Justin Cerritelli, Senior Customer Development Manager – Innovation n Chris Cogan, Senior Manager, Merchandising n Jeff Lee, Director of In-Store Execution Church & Dwight n Dan Bracken, Director, Marketing Services The Clorox Co. n Jill Kettelhodt, Sales Merchandising Manager Best Buy Co. n Chris Brandewie, Director of Store Design The Coca-Cola Co. n Jeff Busch, Director, n Toni Engebretsen, Director, Visual Merchandising Bose Corp. n John Devine, Senior Manager, Merchandising 2 Foodservice & OnPremise Equipment Commercialization WALGREENS Louis Dorado, Director of Space Management Louis Dorado oversees a team that brings to life planograms, floor-plan execution and promotional space at the more than 8,100 Walgreens stores in the United States and Puerto Rico that are visited by more than 6 million shoppers a day. Such a wide scope requires skills in operations, logistics, customer service and efficiency. “I think like an industrial engineer, have the heart of an operator, and I have a passion for people and their development,” says Dorado, who came to Walgreens in 2007 from United Parcel Service after previously working as a Certi-Saver store manager. At Certi-Saver he learned daily store operations and how to treat shoppers, while in his seven years at UPS he focused on spatial planning and operations. “I began running the industrial engineering group responsible for process engineering, time studies, labor forecasting, space optimization and utilization plans,” says Dorado. “Managing space, people and productivity is no different across industries – every inch of space has a cost and opportunity associated to it. The success and differentiation of every team and operation in any industry is determined by the people, technology and processes. “Capabilities, process and technology are core in all that we do [at Walgreens], enabling us to run and change the business simultaneously.” Dorado’s team deals with resets and revisions as well as the opening of flagship locations, interacting with clients as well as several departments within Walgreens. “We are a central hub for source data that feeds more than 90% of the company, including marketing, e-commerce, pricing, insights, supply chain, operations and even finance,” he says. As the needs of the company and its clients change, Dorado and his team try to anticipate and act by hiring top talent, building efficient processes and using best-in-class tools. The Photo by Brian Morrison “Capabilities, process and technology are core in all that we do, enabling us to run and change the business simultaneously.” So, what is Dorado’s view of the role of merchandising in shopper marketing? He likens every inch of each planogram in Walgreens stores to a massive billboard, seen by 12 million eyes daily. He says his team wants to respect clients’ investments in the value message, brand perception and visual cues of their “billboards.” “The fact that shoppers sometimes do something very different than what they think and say they do opens up the door for retailers and brands to drive purchasing behavior,” he says. “The role of merchandising, in collaboration with marketing, should be to manage the quantity while driving the quality and effectiveness of each message. Everything we visually present to the shopper has to have a role and drive expected behavior.” duties of his team evolve to drive efficiencies, capacity, accuracy and compliance, he says. “At times, we consider ourselves a capabilities development department that just happens to build planograms,” Dorado says. “This evolution has provided a more relevant seat at the table and has allowed us to design a structure that embraces technology, automation, business process outsourcing, vendor collaboration and, most importantly, career progression. What I’m most proud of is the continued efforts across marketing and merchandising to deliver a cohesive message in our stores.” 3 HENKEL NORTH AMERICA Henry Hendrix, Director, Shopper Marketing & In-Store Merchandising Henry Hendrix has watched Henkel become a more effective player in the marketplace since he joined the company 10 years ago. He credits the integration of his two functions – shopper marketing and in-store merchandising – with some of that success. “Both are all about marketing to the shopper,” he says. “We thought of them traditionally as separate pieces, but there were times that our shopper marketing campaigns and the merchandising on the floors weren’t telling the same story. It has become really important for me to bring that together wherever we can in a seamless execution.” Hendrix never would have predicted he could be where he is today. From a very young age, he dreamed of being a corporate pilot. He attended Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Prescott, Ariz., where he eventually shifted his focus slightly to aviation business. His first job out of college was with an airport authority in Tucson, Ariz. After earning his MBA with a concentration in marketing from the University of Arizona, he went to work for Minnesota-based Northwest Airlines as an international strategy manager. But Hendrix, like many others in the aviation industry, changed paths after 2001. He became a marketing manager for a regional restaurant company in Arizona before taking a neighbor’s suggestion to put his marketing background to use in the CPG world. Joining the Dial Corp. in 2003 as a brand manager was his first step. Following a few brand manager roles and the acquisition of Dial by Henkel, he moved into the parent company’s Winning-In-Store group. By mid-2011, he was promoted to his current position, which is based in Scottsdale, Ariz. Hendrix says that sometimes the strength of a trade program alone will warrant the type of merchandising he and his six-person team wants to see on the floor. “If the objectives of the retailer and the objectives of our sales team are covered through traditional trade selling, then a shopper market- Photo by Tracy Rasinski the company’s agency of record for shopper marketing and merchandising, RockTenn. His team works most closely with its marketing groups, sales planning team and supply chain, as well as with the field teams for its in-store merchandising work. Hendrix says his team works with retailers on general merchandising needs for both the beauty care and laundry care sides of its business. It offers a national menu of standardized floorstands, PDQs, pallets, etc., that fit the needs of most retailers. “We’ll also do customized work, which could be changes in product mix so the structure will be the same but the product mix is different,” while other times it may be changes to the creative or even custom structures, he says. Hendrix points to the company’s partnership with Dollar General as a success. In 2009 the partners began a literacythemed stock-up program that works across all of Henkel’s brands and gives away 30 computers in 30 days. This year’s effort awarded 30 e-readers. “We get all of the product groups on the shelf because we know from basket analysis that these products tend to be in the cart at the same time when people shop,” Hendrix says. “We were trying to find a way to get people to come to Dollar General looking for these items and buying them all in one location.” “But for those times when more is needed to communicate the equity of the products being sold, that’s when the shopper marketing overlay becomes an important piece of what we’re doing.” ing component isn’t necessary,” he says. “But for those times when more is needed to communicate the equity of the products being sold, that’s when the shopper marketing overlay becomes an important piece of what we’re doing.” The three shopper marketing managers who report to Hendrix generally divide by channel and cover all the brands under the Henkel umbrella. On the merchandising side, two managers are responsible for working with the sales and brand teams to scope projects, and an engineer serves as project manager, pushing all projects through the development process with 4 n Karyn Froseth, Director, Shopper Marketing Capability n Dimitri Foutres, Director, Wall n Karl Flowers, Senior Manager, Small n Spicer Khakoo, Manager, In-Store n Denis Gibney, Director, Strategy Design and Development Format Merchandising Innovation Merchandising Innovation & Design n Dana Ocampo, Manager, Visual Merchandising/Space Planning n Ron Hughes, Director, Shopper Experience Innovation Hughes works at Coca-Cola Refreshments across multiple retail and foodservice channels. He has developed a robust strategic innovation process and built a “state of the art” multichannel shopper experience innovation center. Hughes has been leading the Front End Focus Consortium work at Coca-Cola since 2006. He has more than 18 years of experience, including director of marketing for Sara Lee Branded Apparel where he developed retail and marketing programs. Coinstar Inc./Redbox n Joseph D’Adamo, Senior Manager, User Experience Columbia Sportswear n Adrienne Moser, VP of Global Apparel Merchandising and Design ConAgra Foods Inc. n Rene Brignac, Manager, In-Store Experience Brignac creates and manages all merchandising display vehicles, from concept to commercialization, for ConAgra’s grocery brands. n Scott Faragher, In-store Experience Manager, National Accounts Faragher develops and implements custom secondary display and semipermanent display initiatives for ConAgra brands. n Dean Kubiak, Director, Category Leadership – Snacks, Specialty & Refrigerated Coty US LLC n Michael Curella, Senior Manager, Wall Strategy Crayola n Beth Ondush, Manager, Merchandising n Jim Ivy, Manager, Large Format Merchandising Innovation n Aracely Moreno, Director, Marketing & Emerging Channels n Clay Sharp, Manager, Core Temporary Merchandising Crocs n Sophie Bundalo, VP of Retail, The Americas G Garmin International n Ronnie Lamendola, Manager, D Retail Marketing Dick’s Sporting Goods Inc. n Rick Neira, Director, Visual Presentation and Store Environments Dollar General Corp. General Mills Inc. n Brian Kittelson, Director of Integrated Shopper Marketing n Bryan Wheeler, VP, Merchandising Dr Pepper Snapple Group Inc. n Laura Bailey, Manager, Merchandising Strategy Ghirardelli Chocolates n Aaron Sims, Director of Sales Merchandising E E&J Gallo Winery n Laurence Peters, Design Director, Key Accounts Energizer Holdings Inc. n Davi Tash, Merchandising & Display GlaxoSmithKline n Randy Easterly, Senior Team Leader, Retail Category Solutions Manager Esselte Corp. n Lisa Miller, Retail Channel Marketing Manager n Gary Glew, Director, Retail Category Solutions F Food Lion LLC n Karen Fernald, SVP of Merchandising Foot Locker n Dan Pasqualucci, Senior Team Leader, Retail Access n Brian Landman, Director, Visual Merchandising In-Store Experience Godiva Chocolatier Frito-Lay Inc. n Chelcie Bailey, Senior Manager, Merchandising Commercialization 5 n Jose Padron, Director of Visual Merchandising Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. The Hershey Co. Kimberly-Clark n Arndt Haddenbrock, Manager, n Steve Moore, Senior Manager, n Dayton Henderson, Senior Director, Category Management & Retail The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. Inc. n Vince Nolan, Director of Space Planning Optimization Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Don Collins, Senior Marketing Manager, Merchandising & Retail Innovation, Keurig Collins leads the merchandising & retail innovation department, including strategy for in-store set designs across U.S. & global markets. Key is the Keurig system brand equity at point of influence and creating the perfect shopping experience in-store through branding, visual merchandising, displays and in-store activation for retail impact. Front End Experience n Frank Sheehe, Global Retail and Merchandise Manager Hewlett-Packard Co. n Tinesha Freeman, Senior Manager, n Steve Kram, Associate Director, n Paula Steenstra, Director, Creative n Diane Rogers, In-Store Merchandising Space & Assortment Development n Katherine Tai, Manager, Space & Assortment n Christopher Witte, VP, Customer Development n Maureen Marrone, Director of Visual Merchandising Marrone is responsible for developing in-store merchandising programs, including a variety of display systems and P-O-P materials available to retailers that are designed to accommodate different showrooms and different budgets. n Kurt Kozacek, VP – Visual Merchandising, Mass Channels Kozacek leads a cross-functional team responsible for developing merchandising strategies across all big box, chain drug, and grocery customers. n David MacConnie, Visual J Jockey International n Mark Fedyk, VP, Retail Johnson & Johnson Sales and Logistics Co. LLC n Steven Hecht, Director, In-Store Strategy & Innovation K Kao n John Sullivan, Senior Director, Henkel North America Kellogg Company Marketing & In-Store Merchandising See profile on page 4 BU Lead, Oscar Mayer/Cheese and Dairy/Planters n Craig Schisler, Associate Director, In-Store Merchandising n Jeff Waterman, Senior Manager, In-Store Merchandising L’Oreal n Michael Arecchi, VP of Merchandising n Nancy Hafter, Assistant VP, Promotional Development & Procurement, Consumer Products Division n Laurie Houlihan, VP, Promotional Development & Procurement, Consumer Products Division n Gail McCahery, Director, Promotional Development & Procurement, Consumer Products Division n Christina P. Ragazzini, Director, Promotional Development & Procurement, Consumer Products Division LG Electronics n Bill Thomas, Director, n Richard Meyerkopf, VP, Merchandising, n Henry Hendrix, Director, Shopper In-Store Merchandising L Hallmark Cards Inc. Hannaford and Sweetbay Director, In-Store Merchandising Hillshire Brands Hunter Douglas Inc. Hannaford Brothers Co. Kraft Foods Global Inc. n John Jaffke, Senior n Ray Carlin, VP, Retail Solutions H Director – Mass Channel Visual Merchandising MacConnie leads the visual merchandising design studio across multiple creative disciplines (product presentation, graphic design and industrial design) for Hallmark Cards. He is responsible for strategic and conceptual development of merchandising initiatives throughout mass-channel customers including store/brand environment and consumer-facing market support. Global Design Strategies & Effectiveness n Jeff Woods, Director, Merchandising & Print Services In-Store Marketing Thomas heads in-store marketing for the electronics marketer. He honed his category management skills at Whirlpool, and now at LG he oversees all in-store marketing assets developed across all channels in the U.S. Logitech n Cynthia Bowens, Retail Marketing Manager 6 Photo by Alan Abramowitz/Abramowitz Studio Inc. MICROSOFT or any new titles, we provide the graphics for the windows, the power aisles and the endcaps, and also the product-holding displays for preorder and launch,” he says. “Anything Xbox at retail comes out of our portfolio of assets and guidance.” Floyd and his five-person team (with an additional three vendor contract positions) work closely with the company’s regional marketing teams. “We design the strategy, look and feel, and the assets they should use, and then we work with them as they customize for their retailers around the world,” he says. He believes his work on the retailer side goes a long way in guiding the strategy and approach his team takes for the consumer and shopper. “I like to think my experiences help us get closer to what the retailers need as well as understand the differences in our shoppers by class of trade,” he says. His team pays close attention to creating in-store signage and materials that not only help the consumer and shopper but also the store associates who are selling the products. The team works with retailers through its global channel partners as “they evolve or modify because every retailer has a unique set of standards,” Floyd says. “We can’t just go in and drop unless we buy that space and say we own it. We have to adapt to their requirements, so we almost become a consultant role for the globe. We modify by retailer by class of trade as the requirements fit, and will work to accommodate our own requirements within that as well.” His team relies on the marketing team to design the overall brand strategy for any product, provide research and analytics, and also indicate how the brand should appear above and below the line. “Once they provide the foundation, tools and understanding, as well as the story and proposition,” he says, “we take all of that data and turn it into a strategic merchandising program for retail.” Jason Floyd, Group Manager, Worldwide Visual Merchandising When Jason Floyd was recruited to join Microsoft just over two years ago, he felt he couldn’t pass up the opportunity to work on a brand like Xbox. Proving himself right, Floyd now has a significant notch in his career belt. He describes the recent launch of Xbox One as “by far the biggest thing I have ever done in my life.” Considering Microsoft only rolls out new consoles for Xbox every 10 years or so, Floyd joined the company at just the right time. He had previously worked his way up into Blockbuster’s corporate office for visual merchandising, and then moved on to executive visual merchandising positions at RadioShack and GameStop. “Every retailer has a unique set of standards. We can’t just go in and drop unless we buy that space and say we own it.” Soon after Floyd joined Microsoft, his team got to work on the Xbox One launch by gaining an understanding of the retail landscape and the company’s business objectives. The team designed all of the visual merchandising and brand assets, creating all category management guidance for retailers around the world, and managed execution in the U.S., which entailed custom work with various retailer partners. Leading the worldwide visual merchandising team, as well as more recently the interactive design team for Xbox, Floyd oversees merchandising strategy and category management at retail. His team also develops and provides all of the navigational, shelf and promotional signage. “For any campaigns we launch 7 MONDELEZ INTERNATIONAL Steven Zoellner, Director of Shopper Merchandising Solutions Steven Zoellner has spent the last seven years creating merchandising solutions through the many positions he’s held at Cadbury, Kraft Foods and now Mondelez International. He credits his early career in retail management with giving him a unique perspective. Having worked for both Walmart and Best Buy, Zoellner is trained to look at every program from the perspective of the store manager and the person responsible for placing, stocking and maintaining a display, as well as of the shopper. “I’ve seen literally millions of shoppers walk through stores,” he says. “I saw what they liked, what they didn’t, what they ran their carts into and what they decided they would walk around. Combined with my account management, sales planning, project management and analytical experience, it allows me to look at merchandising programs in a very holistic, 360-degree way.” Zoellner leads a 14-person team responsible for bringing Mondelez merchandising-related strategies to life in-store. “As we’re developing merchandising solutions, whether a redo of an inline display or developing secondary display solutions, POS or shopper marketing materials, I have the ability to look back on my career and draw on what actually happens in-store.” His team’s daily tasks include developing and providing executional solutions for off-shelf filled displays as well as all thematic, fold-flat displays that the company’s direct-storedelivery force uses to build displays. Additionally, all permanent racking solutions that support ongoing brand strategies come through this team. In Zoellner’s mind, seldom is there a universal solution at retail anymore. “All the major retailers need custom solutions for their shoppers and their shopping environments, and we’re more than willing to support that,” he says. Often those specific solutions address universal issues. “We try to work with the industry to identify these universal issues, and then we’ll Photo by Steve Hockstein / Harvard Studio that ran this past summer in which the company leveraged its partnership with the band One Direction to generate increased in-store activity and display placement. He says his team was “very well linked” to the 360-degree campaign. Another highlight is the “Oreo Cookie vs. Creme” brand campaign that was executed in the first quarter of 2013. Zoellner believes that not every piece of merchandising needs to be linked directly to a shopper marketing program, but the “best and biggest” shopper marketing programs are typically linked to equally sizable POS programs. “It’s critical that they’re linked together as part of the planning process,” he says. “Not only do our internal teams need to be linked, but we have to be connected with our retail customers where we want to execute these programs. The mistake a lot of companies make – and we do, too, but we’ve gotten better about catching ourselves – is planning in a vacuum only to find in the real world there are a lot of road bumps along the way and things don’t seem to play out. We all need to be on the same page.” Mondelez’s Nabisco Holiday Traditions Spectacular display recently won a platinum Design of the Times award. Zoellner says the colors, shapes and modularity of the ice castle-themed display allowed for large and very intricate structures in-store. The true beauty of the theme, he says, was that it allowed the company to support retailers beyond the holidays. “It didn’t have to come down immediately,” he says. “Retailers could generate a lot of impulse, basket-building sales off those displays, even after the Christmas timeframe ended.” “The mistake a lot of companies make is planning in a vacuum only to find in the real world there are a lot of road bumps along the way and things don’t seem to play out. We all need to be on the same page.” provide the appropriate solutions to the appropriate retailer.” His team sits within the larger customer business development team at Mondelez and is closely connected to sales planning, shopper marketing and brand marketing, as well as product supply, logistics and a team of global merchandising colleagues that studies trends impacting the company – with the goal of bringing global insights into the U.S. market. Zoellner points to a biscuit-wide promotional campaign 8 n Bill Brownell, GM, World M Wide Retail Services Mars Chocolate U.S. n William Kambol, Merchandising Center of Excellence Manager, Merchandising Center of Excellence Mattel Inc. n Jason Floyd, Group Manager, Worldwide Visual Merchandising See profile on page 7 n Jake Jacobsen, Senior Retail Display Manager n Daryl Finley, Senior Manager, Visual Merchandising Maybelline Garnier n Sean Johnson, Director, Global Merchandising McCormick & Co. Inc. n Sarah Bankert, Senior Merchandising n Joyce Courtney, Senior Display & Merchandising Specialist n Christopher Cuello, Director of the n Adrienne Mattar, Merchandising NestlÉ-Purina MillerCoors LLC n Brian Dirks, Point of Sale Manager Mondelez International n Rosa daGraca, In-Store Merchandising Coordinator n Greg Norsworthy, Director, Retail Presentation, North America NestlÉ-Waters n Pam Mashman Venn, n Joan Hernandez, Packaging Engineer Innovations Manager Senior Display and Merchandising Designer Kambol oversees NestléPurina’s shopper marketing efforts at retail, including sales, marketing, display structure and graphics. He works on several brands including Beneful, Fancy Feast, Pro Plan and Tidy Cats. Marketing Manager, Point-of-Sale Mead Johnson Nutrition n Beverly Hughes, Customer Marketing Manager n Stephen Spaner, Associate Director, Merchandising n Steven Zoellner, Director of Shopper Merchandising Solutions See profile on page 8 Meijer Inc. n Shawn Buckner, Group VP of Foods Merchandising NBC Universal Studios Creative Marketing Development n John Pender, Director, Visual Merchandising n Michele Smith, Associate Director, Visual Merchandising Michaels Stores Inc. Manager n Mary Khachikyan, Production Planning & Purchasing Manager N Merchandising Director, Retail Nintendo of America Inc. n Heather Burton-Garcia, Senior Retail NestlÉ USA n Thomas Kobayashi, Merchandise Manager, Confections & Snacks Division Marketing Manager See profile on page 11 Novartis n Margaret Farrell, Manager, Displays/ Special Packs, Pain Category Merchandising Strategies, Canada Microsoft Corp. Nike Inc. n Matt Kelly, Global Procurement n Chris Jernstrom, Director, n Karyn Abrahamson, Director of Visual Manager, Packaging & Merchandising Stapleton leads packaging and merchandising globally for the writing segment at Newell Rubbermaid. n Kenneth Edwards, Senior Visual Menard Inc. Merck Consumer Care n Becky Stapleton, Senior n Elizabeth Bishop, VP, n Dave Clark, VP, Brand & Product n Scott Mueller, Senior Store Planner Newell Rubbermaid n Steve Kamp, Associate n Cory Wofford, National Retail Merchandising Manager Wofford is the team leader for the Western half of the U.S. 9 Director, Displays/Special Packs Kamp and his team handle displays and special packs including samples for OTC brands. O Price Chopper Supermarkets Sargento Foods Inc. OfficeMax Inc. n Blaine Bringhurst, SVP, Sales, n John Bottomley, Senior Director of Merchandising and Marketing n Chuck Luckenbill, VP, Visual Merchandising Procter & Gamble n Jane Geiger, Package Engineer Manager n Andy Monaco, CMS Category Manager n Daniel Sorvig, Director, Visual Merchandising n Don Overton, Pet Care Display Leader n Bill Smith, Senior Category Account Executive, Duracell NA FMOT P PepsiCo n Brian Kelly, Senior Director of Merchandising & Execution Part of Kelly’s role as senior director of merchandising solutions for Pepsi Beverages includes knowing which nonalcoholic beverages pair well with meals like chicken and pizza, based on the fact that a shopper’s trip mission is the best predictor of in-store behavior. Kelly’s team interacts with brand marketing, field sales, shopper insights and shopper marketing personnel. n David Lothian, Senior Director, Merchandising Center of Excellence R Reckitt Benckiser n Shannon Durham, Director, Category Management Reebok International Ltd. n John Lynch, VP – Head of U.S. Marketing & Merchandising Temporary Merchandising, Frito-Lay of Alternate Channels & Strategic Merchandising Sephora n Maureen Watson, Senior VP, Merchandising Watson oversees the color, skincare, fragrance and Sephora Collection departments. She has worked for Lucky Brand Jeans and Babies “R” Us. The Sherwin-Williams Co. n Paul Cobb, Director, In-Store Marketing Skullcandy n Jeff Chuh, Director of Visual Merchandising Revlon Inc. n Michael Bastian, Senior Art Director, Merchandising Sony Computer Entertainment America n Susan Karbaf, Senior Director, Roll Global Retail Activations n Dave Churchill, National Director, Merchandising n Keith Romere, Manager, Pre-packed Retail Merchandising n Michael Vaszily, Marketing Director S n Millie Steury, Senior Director Channel Marketing Sony Playstation Sony Electronics PETCO Sabra Dipping Co. LLC n Scott Blazer, Senior Buyer n Gladys Hernandez, n Pete Loizzo, Director, Sales Operations n Linda Lampman, Senior Manager, Director, Visual Merchandising & Store Design Hernandez is responsible for all P-O-P, institutional messaging, fixture development and store design. n Tim Swanson, VP, Visual Presentation Pfizer n Chris Beley, Display Team Lead Philips Consumer Lifestyle Retail Marketing Sam’s Club n Anne Lips, Retail n Brian Graham, VP, Merchandising n Heather Mayo, Vice President, Grocery Mayo has more than 19 years of operations and merchandising experience in the retail club channel. She has held responsibility for more than 14 different categories, and was honored as divisional merchandising manager of the year for Sam’s Club in 2009. n Trish Carollo, Merchandising Manager Samsung Electronics Pinnacle Foods n Ronald Elowitz, Director, Visual n Andrew Kohler, Senior Manager, Trade Marketing Merchandising & Operations n Parisa Zander, VP, Retail Marketing 10 Marketing Lead Lips is responsible for retail marketing functions that drive consumer awareness and sales via in-store merchandising solutions such as POS and retail promotion materials, displays, collateral, packaging and online assets. She has developed merchandising programs for some of Sony’s most important product launches like Blu-ray, 3-D HDTVs, sound bars and 4K Ultra HD TVs. n Naila Sfeir, Director of Retail Merchandising, Brand Activation NINTENDO OF AMERICA Heather Burton-Garcia, Senior Retail Marketing Manager A common thread runs through every step of Heather BurtonGarcia’s career path: she has always tried to find ways to reach consumers and encourage them to experience something. From the days when she owned a hospitality design firm to now as a marketer of video games, portables and consoles, Burton-Garcia has always thrived on creating experiences. Even during a nearly seven-year stint at the Beeline Group, “a lot of my touchpoints were interactive or integrated marketing displays where consumers actually engaged with product directly.” Burton-Garcia did some work with Nintendo while at Beeline, then joined the gaming company to get her own experience marketing a specific brand and to become “more closely linked to the strategy behind why decisions were being made at the retail level.” She joined the company in 2007 in merchandising development, then assumed her current role as senior retail marketing manager last June and is now focused on marketing products to consumers through retail channels, whether online or in traditional bricks-and-mortar. “We’re focused on finding a way to market our products for the right consumers,” she says. “Whatever that audience segmentation is, we’re driving new and innovative opportunities for them to experience the product at the store level or to be intrigued enough to convert from a shopper to a purchaser.” Burton-Garcia leads a team of seven that is vertically focused by portables, consoles and general retail marketing. The team engages with Nintendo’s consumer marketing teams, retail sales teams, public relations and corporate affairs, product marketing teams, design team, engineering services and its 140-personstrong national field force that takes the displays and marketing programs and installs them and/or manages them at retail. Photo by Timothy Shonnard that might enhance that experience,” she says. Depending on the product being launched, Burton-Garcia’s team will create custom programs based on the consumer segments it has identified. “Our intent is to make sure we’re providing very solid experiences for consumers and shoppers at particular retailers,” she says. “It doesn’t help us or the retailer to not be aligned on a product offering for that particular audience segment within their store.” Customization of programs and campaigns is based on retailer restrictions as well as the team’s knowledge of the audience segment. “It’s also important for Nintendo to maintain the brand integrity overall, so we won’t customize to the point where it jeopardizes what that experience would actually be or what that product is all about.” That’s where the strength lies in Nintendo’s 2013 Design of the Times award-winning Wii U Interactive display program. “This program was thought through strategically to create a unique and retail-customized experience that was right for the shopper in that particular retailer or environment,” Burton-Garcia says. “The overall brand integrity and architecture was very critical. We wanted to make sure that in every retail location the overall impression of the brand remained consistent, yet the retailer-by-retailer experience and how customers engaged with the brand in each location varied.” “It doesn’t help us or the retailer to not be aligned on a product offering for that particular audience segment within their store.” She was heavily involved in the development of the Wii U console and has had responsibility for retail-specific events and remodels, including the remodel of the Nintendo World Store in the fall of 2010. “I was able to bring in my interior design experience as well as understanding the overall engagement points in retail displays development that I had done at the Beeline Group,” she says. Her team spent a year developing a retail shop-in-shop for a partnership with Toys “R” Us. Currently testing in eight stores in the U.S., the program includes dedicated Nintendo associates to help with the customer experience. “We have the opportunity to help each customer make the right purchase, not only with the hardware, but also offering different accessories 11 n Tony Shinker, Retail Channel Marketing, Display & Packaging Implementation Shinker leads in-store merchandising activities for Sony’s personal and mobile audio categories. He oversees the retail and channel marketing teams and stays current with brand strategy, packaging development and display/fixture implementation. n Natalie Zimny, In-Store Marketing Strategy Manager Zimny drives large-scale strategy, guidelines and long-term innovation for storewide marketing. The Timberland Co. n Jackie LaLime, Director, North American Merchandising Staples Inc. n Robert Madill, VP, Visual Merchandising n Christine Mallon, VP, Retail Marketing Time Inc./Time Warner Retail Sales & Marketing n Troy Stratton, Director, Retail Display U n Michael Dunigan, Merchandising, Unilever Operations Management Visual Merchandising n Karin Summersett, Displays Manager Supervalu n Pat Hildebrand, Shop ‘n Save VP, Merchandising Merchandising Strategy and Development n Mike Wiltgen, Senior Space Management Manager Walmart Stores Inc. n Chad Henderson, Senior Design Manager n Cedric Johnson, Design Manager, Visual Merchandising Services n Noel Knecht, Director, Visual Merchandising Visual Merchandising n Steve Rogers, Senior Director, Visual Merchandising Services at Walmart n Paulo Philip Atienza, Senior Global Marketing Manager – Retail Atienza is head of global brand development for face care in Unilever. He is responsible for delivering global visual merchandising design, global beauty consultancy program development, innovations on digital POS and global gifting and sampling strategy. n John Coyle, Director, n Bill Lipsky, Director of Merchandising Implementation & Space Planning n Don Whetstone, Senior Director, n Barbara Magstadt, Senior Director, Starbucks Coffee Co. n Jennifer Quotson, Director, n Jim Jensen, VP, Daily Living In-Store Visibility n Kenneth Siemens, Design Lead, Senior Manager Visual Merchandising Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment n Renee Richardson, VP, Integrated Retail Creative WhiteWave Foods n Jim Blumberg, Director, Integrated Marketing T T-Mobile USA n Jeanette Keblish, Director of Marketing, CRM Strategy and Planning Target Corp. n LeAnna Pierson, Senior Specialist, In-Store Marketing Strategy n Erika Rinkleff, Senior Specialist, In-Store Marketing Concept Development n Bill Stafford, Senior Design Lead, Fixtures n Kathee Tesija, EVP, Merchandising n Tom Gioielli, Category Strategy Manager – Deodorants & Male Grooming Williams-Sonoma Inc. n David Jimenez, SVP, Visual Merchandising & Store Experience W WalgreenS World Kitchen LLC n Rachel Bishop, VP, Global n Chuck Schneider, Senior Director, Merchandising and Own Brand Expansion n Louis Dorado, Director of Space Management See profile on page 3 n Mike Hattenschweiler, Senior Manager, Visual Merchandising & Creative Services n Jen Theisen, Senior Fixture Designer 12 Visual Merchandising Y Yankee Candle Co. n Jodi Villani, Director of Visual Merchandise