Get with the Weed regime
Approaching 100 days into his job as CMO at Unilever, the man Martin Sorrell calls ’visionary’ is already revolutionising the company’s digital, sustainability and communication strategies. MaryLou Costa meets Keith Weed as he maps out the challenges ahead
Related articles
- To read Keith Weed’s Q&A click here
- To read Keith Weed’s responses to marketing experts questions click here

Scrutiny of the first 100 days in office doesn’t just apply to the likes of US president Barack Obama. Unilever chief marketing officer Keith Weed is also undergoing his 100-day test, being rigorously assessed not only by his company and department but also by millions of consumers across the world.
“I’m a great believer in the first 100 days in a new job,” reflects Weed, who was appointed in March. “I think you have a certain time to invest in a new job and learn the new landscape. You only get one chance to make a first impression. And you only have one opportunity to look at things with fresh eyes.”
By the end of his first 100 days in his new position, Weed will have completed a baptism of fire – not least because the role of chief marketing officer has evolved to incorporate communications, and an elevated responsibility for the company’s sustainability strategy. Weed is also the first marketer to be appointed to the company’s board.
The Unilever veteran looks remarkably fresh in a sharply cut suit as he eagerly recounts the key events of his first few months: countless calls and meetings to get up to speed on all aspects of the Unilever businesses, visits to North America to meet with the company’s US executives, and an excursion to Silicon Valley and Seattle to meet with the world’s heavyweight technology brands to “explore the mutual agenda we can develop”. And, of course, collecting the Advertiser of the Year gong at the Cannes Lions advertising festival in June, for Unilever’s innovative campaigns such as its Peperami co-creation marketing, which encouraged members of the public to come up with the brand’s next advertising concept.
Weed pushes aside the notion that his packed diary is stretching him too thin. “It has all been completely self-led,” he explains. “The trip to Silicon Valley and Seattle was designed and led by myself, so none of this is accidental.”
Taking a team of Unilever category heads to the American technology hubs to meet with the who’s who of digital innovators – Microsoft, Google, Facebook, Yahoo!, Amazon and Apple – marks the beginning of how the “Weed regime”, as WPP chief Sir Martin Sorrell calls it, will differ from how Unilever operated under previous CMO Simon Clift.
Weed says that the company’s digital marketing budget will double this year to put Unilever at the forefront of the digital world. It is this thinking that prompts Sorrell to describe Weed as “engaging, visionary…an ideal client”.
Another key project to support Unilever’s digital revolution is the partnership with film competition board Mofilm, which Weed announced in April. The deal marks a crowdsourcing drive to generate short commercial films for 13 Unilever brands.
The initiative is designed to attract up-and-coming filmmaking talent. Any content produced will be used in an attempt to create brand buzz and consumer engagement through viral videos.
Consumer desire for such engagement is there, Weed claims, revealing that within a week of the initiative being announced, more than 1,000 briefs were downloaded from would-be filmmakers keen to get involved.
“I know everybody has been talking about this digital revolution but I think it is bigger than even the most stretchy visions suggest,” he predicts. “I want to be able to leverage this fantastic revolution to create real engagement with the people who are buying our products, and allow them to help build our brands.”
Building consumer relationships goes beyond just making short films. The importance of entertaining and useful content is recognised by the company as an essential strategy to attract consumers to Unilever brands; part of a strategy embedded by Weed’s predecessor Clift.
“There is a thirst out there for entertainment and content. I don’t think people are happy to sit back and see the world pass in front of them anymore,” Weed claims. “If you look at five years ago, companies like ours would not have had such rich investments in content.” He points to the Flora brand, which is positioned as “the healthy alternative to butter and lard”, as a success story in this area. “We are sharing knowledge with consumers from the thousands of scientists we have working on cholesterol and heart issues.”
While Weed says working with Mofilm is reflective of how the ad world is moving towards content-driven marketing, he is also excited by technology itself. Unilever is one of the first advertisers to launch content on Apple’s new iAd platform.
The company is even investing in quirky technology, such as its ice cream vending machine that requests a user’s smile when they select an ice cream. The smile is then uploaded to Facebook as part of the transaction process in an attempt to share the emotions of buying an ice cream.
While Sorrell asked Weed during Cannes Lions what proportion of Unilever’s entire marketing budget – £4.8bn last year – would be devoted purely to digital this year, Weed would not divulge this commercial secret. He does say, however, that budget allocations will attempt to reflect consumer behaviour in individual markets.
“In the US, where people are spending 25% of their time in some form of digital engagement, then you would be looking at budgets in that order. We would be down to single figures in less developed markets.
“In terms of media choice, we will pick the balance that reflects the task. So it would be incorrect to suddenly put a huge percentage of money towards digital in markets where online use isn’t very developed.”
Weed believes his digital agenda goes hand in hand with his new communications remit, which he describes as a new way of “joined-up thinking”; where all communications, whether marketing or editorially-based, are driven by the same motivations of transparency and consumer benefit.
It is also why Weed believes the company’s sustainability strategy is best overseen by the marketing department (see Q&A, below). In an era of growing consumer expectations, scrutiny, and scepticism of “greenwashing”, joining up marketing and sustainability makes sense so that the overall strategy can be more efficiently communicated and developed, he claims.
Adding such dimensions to the CMO role naturally demands recognition in the boardroom. While Clift’s role before him was noteworthy for being the company’s first full-time CMO, Weed is fortunate in being able to boast he is the first marketer appointed to the Unilever board – a coup for marketers industry-wide, as they fight for more recognition in their organisations.
Weed claims the move reflects the consumer-centric approach that runs right through the company. “Unilever has some really good momentum right now and [chief executive] Paul Polman wants to see us building on that momentum with consumer demand-led growth.
“Being on the board is recognition of the importance of that,” he adds. “So when we come to making investment or strategic decisions, we can orientate that towards the person who is ultimately in charge – the consumer.”
Polman’s own appointment in January last year caused a stir after he became the first Unilever boss to come from “outside the company”. But Weed insists Polman has fitted in well, and his lengthy history with both Unilever rivals Procter & Gamble and Nestlé gives his role a healthy external angle.
Weed claims that Polman has given him a warm welcome to the boardroom and he has quickly learnt the value of having such an ally. “The great news for me is that Paul and I are very aligned in how we see business,” he announced in Cannes. “We have a similar mantra of being consumer centric and seeing the importance of consumer demand-led growth. The Unilever vision is to double our business without increasing our environmental footprint and the only way to achieve that is through consumer demand-led growth. Putting the consumer at the heart of everything we do will drive the business forward. Paul recognises that.”
Weed also made sure during his stay in Cannes to praise the work of his predecessor, possibly to distance himself from any notions of trouble in the marketing department before Clift’s departure: “As far as differences between me and Simon, let me declare my interest. Simon is a really good friend of mine and is the godfather of one of my children. He did a great job in setting up the marketing platform that I have now got. But of course there are still big challenges ahead.”
Those challenges aren’t just about navigating the complex world of digital channels. Being the new man in charge carries a certain pressure, he says. “We have some organisational work and new agenda work going on and what I’m seeing around me is a tremendous appetite for this change.”
“When you have a new leader, there are opportunities to reset the rhythms of a business. If you don’t take that first three or four months to set that new rhythm, then everyone will just settle back into the old one. I, as any new leader is, am interested in stepping up performance – where we are now is great but I want us to be even better.”
As for the successful completion of his first 100 days, Weed will not be one to dwell on the nostalgia of their passing. “My mission is to move quickly, set up the agenda now,” he states. “I’m a man in a hurry with a lot to do. The best thing to do in any race is start how you mean to go on.”
Marketer to marketer

Ben Grace, marketing director at Bulldog Natural Grooming, asks: How will the growing trend in natural and ethical consumerism influence your marketing strategy?
KW: Any consumer trend influences marketing. The bigger the trend, the more people become engaged with it. As far as Unilever is concerned we want to be a leading innovator and marketer. An example of this is PG Tips, for which we source a significant amount of tea from the Rainforest Alliance. By 2015, all Lipton and PG Tips teas will be 100% Rainforest Alliance globally.
And we have been a significant champion for setting up and making progress on the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil [an industry-led initiative set up with the conservation organisation WWF]. We have made a commitment to sourcing completely sustainable palm oil by 2015.
I want to make sure that what we are not doing is just following this as a marketing drive, but as a substantive area. So I want to engage consumers with the products and claims they are interested in, as well as sourcing the products from the right place.

Naomi Segal, campaign director for green lifestyle organisation Global Cool, asks: I notice Unilever has recently launched its Cleaner Planet Plan. Do you think consumers find your sustainability activity credible?
KW: Unilever has a real commitment to the society that it serves. We are looking at the whole value chain, from sourcing to consumer use. The big focus is around our own manufacturing and production. We have made a 41% reduction in CO2, and a 73% reduction in overall waste. They are big figures in an area that is totally within our control.
But you have to start looking at how retailers and consumers engage with your products and work out where there is a big environmental footprint. Take something like Persil Small & Mighty, where we developed the technology to make the product two times concentrated.
This means less water, less plastic, fewer lorries and less shelf space. It’s a win for the consumer and retailer and a competitive advantage for us – and of course it’s a win for the planet.

Gemma Barton, senior brand manager at Green & Black’s, asks: You’ve spoken about digital going from strength to strength; is there a digital campaign that has really stood out for you?
KW: Lipton Tea in China stands out for a campaign that we did at the Chinese New Year. People could upload a picture of their face on to a video that featured people singing and dancing to bring in the New Year. This video was forwarded to more than 100 million people. It shows that if you can get the right sort of approach to digital marketing, you really can engage a massive audience.
Q&A

How is your new role different from that of your predecessor, Simon Clift?
The big difference is that my remit is both marketing and communications and I am now on the executive board. I think this is recognition of a more “joined up” world.
Historically, the Unilever brand sat in the marketing area but Unilever.com sat in the communications area. In an increasingly transparent world, the idea that you would have a team of people in one area talking to investors and another team talking to journalists is yesterday’s thinking.
What we need to do now is have a joined-up approach across all communications. We are seeing more companies moving towards combining marketing and communications and it’s a trend I think you will see grow.
How has the CMO role changed now that you have been appointed to the board?
Paul [Polman] is a very consumer-centric chief executive and has a real drive to put the customer at the heart of the business. My appointment to the board is more a recognition of his vision for Unilever. For me, this makes him a very powerful person to have in the boardroom with you. What he is looking for from me is leadership in that area and I am very pleased to do that.
Equally, I am responsible for sustainability, which is also new to this role. Reducing our environmental footprint requires marketers to innovate in new ways. How can marketing be joined up when we talk about sustainability and ethical products? By making marketing responsible for it.
Unilever had previously said it would recruit 30 new marketers in the UK this year. Has this been completed?
The UK business is indeed recruiting more marketers. I don’t know the stage it’s at, but we will always invest in key markets to attract new talent. We are expanding and recruiting in markets such as China, India and Brazil, as well as the UK and US. There is a feeling at times that everything is happening in the developing world, but that is not how we see it. The UK business is a vibrant one, and we want to build on that.
The Unilever corporate logo is now being used on individual product advertising. How successful has this been?
The Unilever brand has been featuring on all our advertising in the UK for the past year, as well as in the Netherlands and Brazil. We are in 178 countries so we will often pilot something and get an idea of how it has worked. The work we have done around the Unilever brand has been beneficial for all the individual product brands.
This reflects the whole approach to transparency the digital revolution has brought to all of us. Before, I think people were less able to find out about the company behind the brand. Now, they can. When the company behind the brand is more present [on advertising material], people feel reassured by it and individual product brands are fortified. So we are now expanding this into other markets.
Unilever plans to double its spend on digital this year. What particular areas will you be investing in?
People are saying you need a digital strategy and that’s wrong. You need a strategy for the digital world. We are in the middle of a digital revolution and we need to work out how best to engage consumers in that way. So, to me, the model of “paid, owned and earned” media has helped us organise how we invest accordingly: “paid” being anything from TV to print; “owned” being our own websites; and “earned” being how we engage consumers.
Whether we are going to invest more in one or another comes down to the countries and categories and who we are targeting. If we’re looking at India, we need to know what percentage of people in India are online. You need to know that if you’re going to engage with housewives in Shanghai, they are spending an average of three hours a day online. The category you are in will guide you to which strategy you should use.
How will you balance growing Unilever’s business in emerging and developed markets?
More than half our business is in the developing and emerging markets. The growth coming from emerging markets is massive, in China, India and Brazil. We are already well developed in these countries and we don’t want to squander that inheritance. We will grow these markets and our market share quickly.
But we also have massive businesses in the US, Europe and Japan and we would be mad to walk away from those. You have to fight harder again to grow share but you have to do it. There are different strategies in both kinds of markets.
CV
1983-1987 Brand product manager roles, Elida Gibbs UK
1987-1992 Marketing director, Cheeseborough Ponds, Skin & Oral Care
1992-1995 Marketing director, Elida Faberge, France
1995-1998 Senior vice-president Global Hair & Oral Care
1998-2000 Executive chairman, Elida Faberge. Drove success of Lynx and Dove brands in the UK
2000-2005 Executive chairman, Lever Faberge. Key in implementing ‘Cloth World’ campaign for Comfort and ‘Dirt is Good’ campaign for laundry brands
2005-2010 Executive vice-president, global home care & hygiene, Unilever
Outside Unilever, Weed is a Fellow of the Marketing Society and, as an engineering graduate, a Fellow of the Institute of Mechanical Engineers. He is also a non-executive director of Sun Products Corporation.
My last 24 hours
I’ve just come back from a 12-day trip to North America and then on to Cannes, so there was a lot of catching up to do back in London.
I started with a 7am phone call with Yuri Jain, the chief executive of our water business in India. At 8.45am I was with Richard Davies, my senior vice-president for consumer and market insight, to prepare for some sessions with our non-executive directors around consumer immersion. They are going to learn about our consumers and see some of the things we do to engage with them.
At 9.30 I met with Will Gardner, who leads our marketing academy, and Mike Polk, who is president of our food and home personal care category globally, to talk about return on marketing investment.
At 11am I did an interview with The Times, then at midday I spoke with Laura Klauberg in the US, who I have promoted to be the global SVP of media. We talked about how we were going to step up to the challenges that are ripe in digital.
At 4pm I met with Accenture, which we work with for some of our global marketing. At 6.30pm, I spoke with [our vice-president of agency relations] Paula Quazi about the construction of our agency reviews. The day ended with the retirement party of Steve Williams, our company secretary.







