Hard Charger

Jean-Paul Scheuer:
"Retreat Is For Losers" 

Despite a business degree, Jean-Paul Scheuer may owe much of his success to a simple packaged salad.
After university, the sanofi-aventis Zentiva executive spent two years selling packaged salads to markets across France.

"The salad was terrible, but I had to say it was good," he said. "With conviction, you can sell anything."
"When we studied marketing in school, I hated it.  It was awfully boring, and so I chose economics and finance," Scheuer says. "Now, I see that is boring, and I enjoy marketing much more."

Scheuer says that he learned as much about business reality by selling salads as he did in business school.
"When you leave business school, you think that you are the best at everything, because that's what everyone tells you," he said.  "When you are looking for a job, though, reality sets in."

"As a salad salesman, I was humiliated, but it's where I obtained my experience.  This is where I learned my job."   He notes, "when I talk to a medical sales representative, I know what he's doing.  It's the same process."

Scheuer eventually tossed salads aside for his first job in pharmaceutical sales.  After two years on the road, a desk job looked appealing.  He quickly became bored with office routine, though, and the road beckoned once again. 

Another pharmaceutical firm wanted a foreign product manager who spoke English.  That job sent him to North African French-speaking countries, then to Canada, Vietnam, Mexico, and into Eastern Europe.

The job wasn't his first international exposure.  The son of expatriates, he grew up in Singapore and Greece.  The peripatetic Scheuer learned to love foreign travel while still in his teens.

As regional head of global pharmaceutical giant sanofi-aventis, which combined this year with Zentiva, an important generic drug maker, Scheuer spends as much as a quarter of his time on tasks directly related to promoting his company's ever-expanding product line.  He says that, if taken in a broader sense, as much as 75 percent of his time is spent on marketing activities.

He says that he hopes that his three in-house marketing specialists view his previous marketing experience as a positive factor, rather than as interference. 

"They can bring ideas to me, and I challenge them.  I think that if I didn't have my marketing experience, I would have more problems," he said.  "I really like marketing. I am very demanding, and I expect a lot.  In a marketing plan, I want to see projects that haven't been done by our competitors."

"We need to be a leading company in terms of creativity. We need to be a leader in marketing.  I don't want to wait and see what others do."

Scheuer likes to give his marketing ream the freedom to explore possibilities.     
"I don't see myself as a very creative person.  I want my people to be creative - they are the experts - they are more able than me to make a campaign," Scheuer says, while adding that "I am the best judge of success, and can make [staff ideas] even better."

"If you give people freedom, they will generate ideas.  The freedom to create means that there is no fear of refusal of the ideas.  We cannot, of course, implement all of the ideas, but we take the best of them, and turn them into something better."

Scheuer says that the pharmaceutical business faces two marketing problems that don't affect other industries. 
First, he says, "we need to use ethical ways to promote our products, even when our competitors do not.  We need to fight the temptation to do things easier or faster by sidestepping the ethical issues." 

Second, Scheuer says that the prescription drug business "has to be one of the only industries where we don't face the end consumer - we go through a physician or pharmacist.  The consumer doesn't choose our product, it is chosen for him.  We need to convince the patient that a drug is good without talking to him directly."
Scheuer expects to spend three more years in Ukraine. 

"I love this country, I love the challenges here, and we have a good team," he says. 
While Scheuer acknowledges the economic crisis and the pain it has inflicted on many Ukrainians, "we can't hide behind it," he says.

"If you can still be ambitious, even in tough times, with a clear vision of what you want and where you want to go, you will continue to move forward," he says.  "Moving forward is not important - it's the only thing to do.  Staying the same is not interesting. Retreat is for losers."

After all, the lifelong traveler says, "if you know where you are going, you have the best chance to arrive."

 

Publisher's Letter


First, there is a need for a quality, English-language marketing magazine. Secondly, we need to reach out to a larger contributor base to gain more diversified opinions. Thirdly, we need to define the purpose of the magazine more clearly.

Gadflies and Oracles:


The advent of Internet web logs, or blogs, has given thousands of people the opportunity to share their views with the world. Some bloggers find regular and loyal audiences, while most do not. Those that have attracted readers are succeeding because they offer more than opinion alone; they have relevant knowledge and timely information to share as well.

The Death of Newspapers


The important word in newspaper is not "paper" but "news", and the sooner publishers realize this, the sooner the angst over a dying industry can be brought to an end.

Tough Love


The Swami was asked the other day by the media if it were true he didn't much care for cuddly dogs, cute children, purring kittens or Bono, the saintly pop and rock singer. His reply was a quick, "Yeah, sure, I like pit bulls."

Long Live the Moniker


When I was working my way through university as a deckhand, my shipmates called me Loophole - partly to differentiate me from my father, who they called Louie, and partly as a term of affection and respect.

How to be a Great Copywriter


Copy is king.This is the case even in a visual world, where the public grazes through thousands of ads each day, where messages flicker across the TV screen and dangle from or are plastered on every conceivable surface.

Four Ways to Avoid Brand Implosion


But Maclaren, a privately held British company that makes children's strollers, attempted to trump common sense with what it obviously hoped was good business sense.

The Zombie Generation?


Guess what, mommies and papas? Little Igor is not - repeat not - becoming a social zombie by spending so much time on the computer.

People Power


Sergey Detyuk was promoted to information technology director at DTEK, a leading Ukrainian power company controlled by Rinat Akhmetov.

Thinking Small


For the average small business owner, marketing research is a personal matter. They are less likely to engage research firms or marketing consultants to conduct opinion polls and focus groups than they are to merely engage

The Great Slogan Contest


You're not going to remember that slogan. It was thought up by a clever ad person in 1929, but our publisher-who insists he wasn't around at that time-says it was the best positioning statement ever for Coca-Cola.

Hard Charger
EBA NEWS
Is The Press Release Dead?
Beyond Boundaries
Five Deadly Sins That Can Kill an Agency
We Have a Winner
Love Net: Consumers Click with Online Ads
Strategic Approaches

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