top of page

Puma and The Meaning of Work - Career Interview with a Senior Marketing Head

1

00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:04,960

So I got into marketing basically right out of high school, if you will.

2

00:00:04,960 --> 00:00:06,640

There's a... Wow.

3

00:00:06,640 --> 00:00:11,440

Yeah, there was like an apprenticeship that I did in an advertising agency.

4

00:00:11,440 --> 00:00:16,240

And I thought back then it was all like glossy, flashy business to be in.

5

00:00:16,960 --> 00:00:22,960

I then figured out quite fairly soon that there's more of a number side in me

6

00:00:22,960 --> 00:00:30,560

than the creative side really, which then drove me to media.





7

00:00:48,800 --> 00:00:52,160

So welcome to The Meaningful Jobs podcast season three. I'm your host Adrian.

8

00:00:52,160 --> 00:00:55,760

Today we're extremely honored to be joined by Herman Hasenstein,

9

00:00:55,760 --> 00:01:01,120

who is the Senior Head of Marketing from Puma. So how are you doing, Herman?

10

00:01:01,840 --> 00:01:03,280

I'm good. Thanks for having me, Adrian.

11

00:01:04,080 --> 00:01:09,520

So, you know, when a lot of people hear about Puma, they immediately get excited

12

00:01:09,520 --> 00:01:13,120

because it's one of the best brands there are, you know, in the world.

13

00:01:14,000 --> 00:01:18,960

And with you being in such a high level position in marketing, I guess a lot of our listeners

14

00:01:18,960 --> 00:01:23,040

are dying to hear from you about any particular marketing insights you've got.

15

00:01:23,040 --> 00:01:27,040

But before we do this, can you tell us a little bit about your career?

16

00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:29,680

So how you got into marketing and how you got to where you are?

17

00:01:30,240 --> 00:01:34,720

So I got into marketing basically right out of high school, if you will.

18

00:01:36,720 --> 00:01:41,600

Yeah, there was like an apprenticeship that I did in an advertising agency.

19

00:01:41,600 --> 00:01:46,400

And I thought back then it was all like glossy, flashy business to be in.

20

00:01:46,400 --> 00:01:53,120

And I then figured out quite fairly soon that there's more of a number side in me

21

00:01:53,120 --> 00:01:59,440

than the creative side, really, which then drove me to media planning and buying.

22

00:01:59,440 --> 00:02:03,680

And this is where I basically started my career after my university.

23

00:02:04,800 --> 00:02:11,360

And after that, it was more of trying to combine passion

24

00:02:11,360 --> 00:02:17,520

with something that will actually pay you well. Right. And that is well, media on the one hand

25

00:02:17,520 --> 00:02:22,080

side is great. But then on the other hand side, well, what clients are there out there that are

26

00:02:22,080 --> 00:02:28,080

really, really appealing to me that I can identify with and actually ultimately motivate me.

27

00:02:28,080 --> 00:02:34,880

And that was back then for the World Cup 2006, Adidas, when we did, when we had the World Cup

28

00:02:34,880 --> 00:02:42,240

in Germany and me on a media agency side, we took care of the so-called spectacular for Adidas,

29

00:02:42,240 --> 00:02:50,720

which was the goalkeeper diving over the Autobahn and the Fresco in the train station Cologne

30

00:02:50,720 --> 00:02:56,800

and all the skyscraper wrappings in Frankfurt and Hamburg. And that was really something that

31

00:02:56,800 --> 00:03:02,320

I thought, wow, like really working for a sports brand is quite something. I mean, having them as

32

00:03:02,320 --> 00:03:07,600

clients is one thing, right. But then ultimately I thought, well, being on the brand side, that's

33

00:03:07,600 --> 00:03:12,880

even probably better. So after a short stint in New York, where I had the Samsung as a client,

34

00:03:12,880 --> 00:03:20,240

again, me being in a media agency, then I had a job offer as head of media at Puma here in Boston.

35

00:03:20,240 --> 00:03:28,160

And that was would be basically taking care of all of the global media strategy and planning and

36

00:03:28,160 --> 00:03:36,080

buying as far as we could do it for actually for all the 45 entities globally. But it was more of

37

00:03:36,080 --> 00:03:43,360

a coordination and administrative role with a brand that I said, like, I think it's very,

38

00:03:43,360 --> 00:03:49,520

very exciting, always has cool stuff. It's not necessarily the market leader in all the markets,

39

00:03:49,520 --> 00:03:52,000

only a few markets, but yeah.

40

00:03:52,000 --> 00:03:53,440

That's still good enough, right?

41

00:03:53,440 --> 00:04:01,840

It's still good enough. We are a challenger brand and we like this position and see it as an

42

00:04:01,840 --> 00:04:02,400

opportunity.

43

00:04:03,440 --> 00:04:08,320

So before talking about Puma, let's just rewind a little bit to talk about your experience in

44

00:04:08,320 --> 00:04:14,000

Germany. So how different is it working in Germany compared to the US, you think?

45

00:04:15,680 --> 00:04:22,400

That's a great question. Ultimately, I would say it's not that much different. What I do

46

00:04:22,400 --> 00:04:31,840

enjoy working in the US is a positive mindset. It's a can do attitude. That doesn't really

47

00:04:31,840 --> 00:04:37,120

account for everyone and every team member, but I think it's generally something that

48

00:04:37,680 --> 00:04:45,920

is expected from you that you come to work with a positive note and yeah, you roll up your sleeves,

49

00:04:45,920 --> 00:04:50,880

you're ultimately responsible for what you're doing, and you're expected to take accountability.

50

00:04:50,880 --> 00:04:55,440

And I'm not saying that it's not necessarily like that in Germany, but I think it's not as prevalent.

51

00:04:56,320 --> 00:05:02,160

I think Germans are known for being really practical, right? So Americans obviously,

52

00:05:02,160 --> 00:05:09,120

they get this, they have this side of it, but you're saying that American mindset might be even

53

00:05:09,120 --> 00:05:10,080

more positive, right?

54

00:05:10,080 --> 00:05:16,720

That's a great point. That's a great point, Adrian. Maybe it's that Germans are practical and

55

00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:22,320

therefore sort of efficient. They would technically stop when something doesn't make sense anymore.

56

00:05:22,320 --> 00:05:29,120

And while maybe Americans are just more on the side of, well, what's the effect? And so they put

57

00:05:29,120 --> 00:05:35,200

more into it and expect a big effect to a degree where you already maybe hit a curve or saturation

58

00:05:35,200 --> 00:05:41,840

there. So that's maybe efficiency versus effectiveness, if that makes sense, right?

59

00:05:41,840 --> 00:05:50,400

So that's maybe one of the differences. I think ultimately the work-life balance is something that

60

00:05:50,400 --> 00:05:56,880

I think Americans still have to figure out versus Germans who are very, very good at protecting

61

00:05:56,880 --> 00:06:01,280

themselves, shielding them off from too much work.

62

00:06:01,280 --> 00:06:04,000

And that fits the stereotype, I guess.

63

00:06:04,000 --> 00:06:10,080

Maybe. 5 PM, I'm not going to respond to emails. I'm exaggerating to make a point, right?

64

00:06:10,080 --> 00:06:14,640

Especially when you're at a more senior level, yes, there's emails around the clock, there's calls

65

00:06:14,640 --> 00:06:20,640

around the clock, especially in the global capacity. But this is something where the weekends

66

00:06:20,640 --> 00:06:27,120

are the weekends and you don't necessarily work at the weekends. While in the US, I feel there's

67

00:06:27,120 --> 00:06:34,720

more of an expectation that, no, you're going to be available. And so you're expected to basically...

68

00:06:34,720 --> 00:06:38,880

That's a bit similar to the Asian mindset, I think. In a lot of Asian countries,

69

00:06:38,880 --> 00:06:44,160

like Hong Kong, which is where I'm from, your boss expects you to still be working on holidays,

70

00:06:44,160 --> 00:06:49,920

which I'm not saying is a good mindset, but a bit similar to American values, I think.

71

00:06:49,920 --> 00:06:57,760

I would agree with that. And I don't think... Let me put it this way. What I hear from Asia,

72

00:06:57,760 --> 00:07:04,400

and especially Korea, Japan, and then Turkey, of course, also China, has almost reached in sort of

73

00:07:04,400 --> 00:07:18,560

unhealthy areas, right? Where everyone is sort of putting themselves into a position where it's for

74

00:07:18,560 --> 00:07:24,160

the greater good and you have to deliver for the company's good. While maybe in America, it's more

75

00:07:24,160 --> 00:07:31,440

for yourself and for your personal wealth and for your personal success. So I think there is a slight

76

00:07:31,440 --> 00:07:37,680

variance to that. That being said, maybe the effect is the same. And that is that basically,

77

00:07:38,480 --> 00:07:44,720

other than just working and slipping the kids to sports and school events, et cetera,

78

00:07:45,280 --> 00:07:50,400

there's not much time for yourself. And that I feel Western European, maybe a particular German,

79

00:07:51,200 --> 00:07:57,520

people have figured out that there's always some time built in for hobbies and meeting friends,

80

00:07:57,520 --> 00:08:05,280

meeting outside at bars or beer gardens. So before you went to the States for your job

81

00:08:05,280 --> 00:08:10,480

in Puma, have you been to the States for travel? And when you had this opportunity to go to the

82

00:08:10,480 --> 00:08:18,800

States to work full-time, what's your initial reaction to it? So I think it's sort of slightly

83

00:08:18,800 --> 00:08:24,320

biased. So first of all, I'm married to an American citizen. So... Okay, that explains it then.

84

00:08:24,320 --> 00:08:30,160

I came over to Hamburg when I was working at a media agency and experienced firsthand what it was

85

00:08:30,160 --> 00:08:36,720

to live in Germany or Western Europe. And so we basically made the shift because there was parental

86

00:08:36,720 --> 00:08:42,320

leave and we weren't really jumping into the cold water. Rather than it was like, well, let's see

87

00:08:42,320 --> 00:08:49,760

if we can find jobs there. And my first experience being hired or working in the US was at a media

88

00:08:49,760 --> 00:08:58,080

agency for a client that actually was from Korea, Samsung. And that was exactly what I just described.

89

00:08:58,080 --> 00:09:04,080

So it was working around the clock. So you got up early in the morning, you weren't really sure if

90

00:09:04,080 --> 00:09:11,760

you had a conference call at 6 a.m. or not. And then at 11 p.m., 12 a.m., there were still conference

91

00:09:11,760 --> 00:09:17,120

calls. And it's of course a different time zone, but it was also the expectations from the client

92

00:09:17,120 --> 00:09:26,720

in Korea that you would of course be available as a global team. And especially if they are Samsung,

93

00:09:26,720 --> 00:09:33,120

right? You can't do something that's not up to standard with such a big client, right?

94

00:09:33,680 --> 00:09:39,520

100%. They had different standards, I would say, from the clients that I used to work for before,

95

00:09:39,520 --> 00:09:43,680

which were Western European brands. It's not just Inida's Weibo, but also Philips Consumer

96

00:09:43,680 --> 00:09:50,880

Electronics. It was sort of comparable, right? But yeah, they had entirely different expectations

97

00:09:50,880 --> 00:09:58,880

and standards, to be honest. I see. So I guess being married to an American lady would be a lot

98

00:09:58,880 --> 00:10:06,560

easier for you to then move to the States with her. So after moving to the States, how was it like

99

00:10:06,560 --> 00:10:11,200

staying with Puma and what made you stay with Puma for such a long time?

100

00:10:11,200 --> 00:10:19,120

Well, so I actually got the job at Puma in the US. So I never had the chance to compare how it was

101

00:10:19,120 --> 00:10:24,800

to work for Puma in the headquarters back in Bavaria versus here in the international market

102

00:10:24,800 --> 00:10:32,640

department. But ultimately, I really, really enjoyed, while having my first job on the brand

103

00:10:32,640 --> 00:10:41,200

side, the client side, as I call it, still from the media agency mindset, is the degree of freedom

104

00:10:42,160 --> 00:10:50,960

that we have almost like, as long as it makes sense, do your thing, right? If it's something

105

00:10:50,960 --> 00:10:58,160

that is good for the brand, then try to be scrappy about the resources that you take,

106

00:10:58,160 --> 00:11:05,600

put all in that you have for this project that you're after, and then make a proof of concept.

107

00:11:05,600 --> 00:11:12,880

And ultimately, it will roll out. You can roll out on a global level, right? So these opportunities,

108

00:11:12,880 --> 00:11:19,600

apart from my role responsibility for global media and then later global budget management,

109

00:11:19,600 --> 00:11:26,960

which was a little bit like a blueprint that I was able to maybe interpret and then

110

00:11:26,960 --> 00:11:33,520

in my own way and maybe even build out in my own way. But when it comes to, let's say,

111

00:11:34,080 --> 00:11:40,480

market analytics or consumer insights, these were things that were absolutely not thought about at

112

00:11:40,480 --> 00:11:46,960

Puma as something that's needed, neither on a local nor on a central level. And I was always

113

00:11:46,960 --> 00:11:52,560

wondering, like, this is crazy. This is something that we absolutely need to do in order to be

114

00:11:52,560 --> 00:12:00,000

somewhat future proof. And nobody said no here. It's just the mindset wasn't there that this is

115

00:12:00,560 --> 00:12:05,920

something that we really put a lot of resource in. No, it's like you go, Herman, march on,

116

00:12:05,920 --> 00:12:12,720

and let's see where it takes us. And so now we have a team taking care of it. And there's tools

117

00:12:12,720 --> 00:12:18,000

and processes in place. Now we have a new CEO, a new marketing director. And of course, their

118

00:12:18,000 --> 00:12:23,760

expectations are where is consumer insights, where is the market analytics and we are able to provide

119

00:12:23,760 --> 00:12:30,080

this now in a more or less organized manner that actually follows some certain standard procedures

120

00:12:30,080 --> 00:12:36,080

and processes and is totally up to par with the market. So I guess a lot of our listeners

121

00:12:36,080 --> 00:12:42,800

and candidates would like to understand how your work directly impacts the brand image of Puma,

122

00:12:42,800 --> 00:12:48,720

because a lot of people are fascinated by how brands can become the best in the world. Right.

123

00:12:48,720 --> 00:12:53,520

There are so many other fashion brands, so many other retail brands. What do you think is, if you

124

00:12:53,520 --> 00:13:02,160

have any, the secret sauce or secret recipe that, you know, propelled Puma to have the best friends

125

00:13:02,160 --> 00:13:10,400

in the world? And how are you involved with it? I guess it's a very good question, because I'm

126

00:13:10,400 --> 00:13:16,560

wondering, being more on the operational side of things, of course, I would question my own

127

00:13:17,280 --> 00:13:22,640

contribution to how far the brand is getting more appealing or relevant to the consumer. Right.

128

00:13:23,600 --> 00:13:33,760

I would say, though, that my job is to help decision makers and also ultimately creative

129

00:13:33,760 --> 00:13:39,840

designers to make informed decisions and not just based on gut feelings, which in the past

130

00:13:40,880 --> 00:13:48,080

turned out to be either right or wrong. For example, like a Rihanna collab back in 2014-15,

131

00:13:48,640 --> 00:13:52,480

I don't think you can really root it in consumer insights and then say, well,

132

00:13:53,040 --> 00:13:59,600

are now plateau shoes a big thing? You know, the Raleigh Creeper shoe. And even designers would

133

00:13:59,600 --> 00:14:07,680

probably not even let us help them the way in terms of, well, what does the consumer expect now?

134

00:14:07,680 --> 00:14:12,720

Well, the designer is always thinking about what consumers expect in 18 months or two years time.

135

00:14:13,760 --> 00:14:18,560

So that's some, we can argue about artificial intelligence and if this is something that can

136

00:14:18,560 --> 00:14:23,600

be extrapolated. That being said, with the brand tracker that we have in place, with the marketing

137

00:14:23,600 --> 00:14:32,320

analytics, how to plan and repeat success, there is a lot of, you call it the secret sauce. There is

138

00:14:33,120 --> 00:14:39,360

now a formula, if you will, where we can tell the countries and therefore ultimately also the other

139

00:14:39,360 --> 00:14:46,560

part of my job, the budget steering, strategic budget investment, where to strategically invest

140

00:14:46,560 --> 00:14:54,640

versus where not to invest. Do we need to have more signings with soccer players versus more

141

00:14:54,640 --> 00:15:00,640

ambassador signings, you know, or lifestyle sponsorship, et cetera. So these are things

142

00:15:00,640 --> 00:15:07,440

where I think, yeah, we can help turning the right screws, push the right buttons. And that's

143

00:15:07,440 --> 00:15:11,920

ultimately where I see my responsibility and seen ahead of market operations.

144

00:15:11,920 --> 00:15:19,680

So in terms of working for Puma, a lot of people would like obviously to work for Puma,

145

00:15:19,680 --> 00:15:24,480

but what are the core values of working for Puma and what are the kind of people you're looking for,

146

00:15:24,480 --> 00:15:31,840

you think? I think it's basically not necessarily referring to core values at Puma, more like

147

00:15:32,400 --> 00:15:37,440

the result of the core values are, well, you've got to be passionate about it.

148

00:15:37,440 --> 00:15:43,280

Yeah. You've got to be, as I said earlier, you've got to be scrappy about your resources. There's

149

00:15:43,280 --> 00:15:50,960

always too many jobs for not enough people, right? And being a challenger brand, it's not like,

150

00:15:50,960 --> 00:15:57,280

we're not Nike, we cannot hire a huge team to throw at every problem, right? So we have to,

151

00:15:57,920 --> 00:16:04,560

yeah, look at it in like a humble way and being very nimble about the way we approach it and

152

00:16:04,560 --> 00:16:10,160

how we solve it. So you have to have, you've got to be passionate about it. You have to have some

153

00:16:10,160 --> 00:16:17,280

sort of a spirit that is almost like an entrepreneurial attitude within a company that

154

00:16:17,280 --> 00:16:22,160

some people would still describe as like, oh, that's a big tanker. But when you compare to

155

00:16:22,160 --> 00:16:28,960

a company like Nike or Adidas, God, no, we are absolutely, we are able to turn on the dime and

156

00:16:28,960 --> 00:16:36,880

really shift resources easily, which also at COVID has helped us. So we were able to cut marketing

157

00:16:36,880 --> 00:16:44,160

budget left and right and put it all into DTC channels and Ecom at a much faster pace than our

158

00:16:44,160 --> 00:16:51,200

competitors could do. So the passion, the self-cultivation, I think you've got to be a

159

00:16:51,200 --> 00:17:00,880

nice person because it's really, it's the atmosphere at Puma. We always, maybe if you saw

160

00:17:00,880 --> 00:17:06,800

the town halls and the quarter results, the 75th birthday videos right now, we're family.

161

00:17:06,800 --> 00:17:12,240

It's called, we've had ourselves being a Puma family. And that really is something where

162

00:17:13,520 --> 00:17:18,720

in the media agency world, it's fine. You celebrate together. You go to the pop in London afterwards,

163

00:17:18,720 --> 00:17:26,400

right? When it comes to brand side, the client side, it's not, I would say it's not really

164

00:17:26,400 --> 00:17:31,520

expected that you hang out with your colleagues all the time, but at Puma, that's ultimately what

165

00:17:31,520 --> 00:17:40,000

you do. So it's relatively young crowd, I would say, and bringing in everybody to not just

166

00:17:40,800 --> 00:17:47,600

celebrations, but actually having fun at work with each other. That is, I think, absolutely,

167

00:17:47,600 --> 00:17:54,800

it's paramount. Yeah, I think that's a great prerequisite for a company to attract the best

168

00:17:54,800 --> 00:18:00,960

talent. And aside from all these great things that you get working at Puma, like hanging out

169

00:18:00,960 --> 00:18:08,320

as a big family and all these learning opportunities, how would you say you guys contribute to society?

170

00:18:08,320 --> 00:18:13,360

Like what's the greater meaning in working for such a large brand?

171

00:18:13,360 --> 00:18:18,000

That's a very good question, because you're getting at the Icky Guy, like what's your,

172

00:18:19,200 --> 00:18:23,920

what you get paid for, right? What you're good at, what you love to do, and what's actually good for

173

00:18:23,920 --> 00:18:32,480

society. Then the sweet spot would be your Icky Guy, which is something that I need to question

174

00:18:32,480 --> 00:18:38,480

to a certain degree, because when you ultimately produce something, and shoes, apparel, fitness,

175

00:18:38,480 --> 00:18:43,680

apparel, is, yes, it needs to be produced, it probably has an impact on the environment, right?

176

00:18:44,800 --> 00:18:52,080

So it's really, you want to minimize that impact, I think. And this is something that, with our

177

00:18:52,080 --> 00:18:58,000

sustainability approach at Puma, something we absolutely look after right now. So I'm not

178

00:18:58,000 --> 00:19:04,000

necessarily saying that apart from providing sports, fitness, apparel for people who want to

179

00:19:04,000 --> 00:19:10,800

be active or stylish, but we, I think, are really focusing also on people who actually like to do

180

00:19:10,800 --> 00:19:17,680

sports and soccer, run, train, basketball, you name it. That's the one thing we want to incentivize

181

00:19:17,680 --> 00:19:23,040

people to do sports, about be living a healthy lifestyle. On the other hand, yes, we do know

182

00:19:23,040 --> 00:19:31,280

that the production of these goods has an impact, and we are absolutely more or less

183

00:19:31,280 --> 00:19:38,640

on a faster track, like say, in minimizing this impact in our competition. There's a big

184

00:19:38,640 --> 00:19:48,000

program that you can see online, 10 out of 10, and we are exceeding regularly our own goals in

185

00:19:48,640 --> 00:19:53,520

making this brand a more sustainable brand. And that's not even greenwashing. I think we are

186

00:19:53,520 --> 00:20:01,920

absolutely conscious of the impact that we have. It's just going forward, and especially when you

187

00:20:01,920 --> 00:20:10,080

look at the consumer that is more conscious of this, you just have to be mindful and do everything

188

00:20:10,080 --> 00:20:15,280

you can in order to minimize this impact. And then I think we do that. And that's what I'm

189

00:20:15,280 --> 00:20:20,080

very proud of. And when you look at the Ikigai, when I say, like, oh, is it good for the environment,

190

00:20:20,080 --> 00:20:28,080

or is it good for the greater good and the society? What's your net impact on that? And for

191

00:20:28,080 --> 00:20:35,520

Puma, I couldn't really say, but I think if you replace that in the Ikigai, the four pillars, if

192

00:20:35,520 --> 00:20:41,360

you replace something that, well, do you identify with this? Are you proud of it? That, I think,

193

00:20:41,360 --> 00:20:45,920

is something that I can say absolutely yes. So there's nothing that I need to be embarrassed

194

00:20:45,920 --> 00:20:52,240

about. Well, that's good. That's good. No, exactly. I mean, if you work for big oil,

195

00:20:52,240 --> 00:20:58,960

or if you work for tobacco and alcohol, whatever, it's like, well, what's there? So I think right

196

00:20:58,960 --> 00:21:05,280

now, yes, this is ultimately, for me, the way I would sort of slightly adjust the Ikigai. So

197

00:21:05,280 --> 00:21:10,560

like, okay, are you motivated? Are you embarrassed about your employers? No, absolutely not. I see.

198

00:21:10,560 --> 00:21:17,680

I'm fascinated by how you view your competitors, because this came up quite a few times,

199

00:21:18,560 --> 00:21:25,280

just now in our interview. So you talked a little bit about Adidas and Nike. How would you compare

200

00:21:25,280 --> 00:21:30,800

you guys to them? What kind of things that you think you're better than them? And what are the

201

00:21:30,800 --> 00:21:35,040

things that you think you need to try and catch up to hopefully overtake them?

202

00:21:35,040 --> 00:21:42,800

Well, I think the one thing that I guess we can do better than them is what I said earlier,

203

00:21:42,800 --> 00:21:52,560

is like, I think we're much more nimble, we can react much faster to certain trends and changes

204

00:21:52,560 --> 00:21:57,120

in consumer behavior. That being said, I think where we could do better is actually listening

205

00:21:57,120 --> 00:22:03,520

to the consumers, not just relax and be like, okay, I'm going to do better. And I think

206

00:22:03,520 --> 00:22:11,120

we rely on our own gut feelings when it comes to designs and trends. But I think, yeah, especially

207

00:22:12,080 --> 00:22:20,080

when you have such big companies like Adidas and Nike, I think it's very, let's say, easy for them

208

00:22:20,080 --> 00:22:28,720

to just, let's say, swamp the market with just marketing money and sign all the teams and players,

209

00:22:28,720 --> 00:22:38,080

etc. So we have to be very, very, yes, responsible with our limited resources, right? Which again,

210

00:22:38,080 --> 00:22:43,280

I think makes us, let's say, very, very nimble and say, okay, well, we want to do this, but let's

211

00:22:43,280 --> 00:22:50,800

say that we can't just spray and pray, you know, we really have to be mindful on where we, what

212

00:22:50,800 --> 00:22:57,840

nest we put our eggs in. And this is something that I think, yeah, in the midterm, it doesn't

213

00:22:57,840 --> 00:23:03,520

really sound like a big strategy, right? But it's something that will always be to our advantage.

214

00:23:03,520 --> 00:23:09,360

So especially when it comes to clients, or let's say the retail, not necessarily the consumer,

215

00:23:09,360 --> 00:23:15,840

but the retail, and what they demand from us, I think we are in a much better position to

216

00:23:15,840 --> 00:23:25,760

ultimately have them address their needs, and do not necessarily need to take care of so much

217

00:23:25,760 --> 00:23:31,360

under like a big e-commerce, all of our flagship stores, etc. Right? No, we can actually go to the

218

00:23:32,800 --> 00:23:38,240

retail and be again, like, very adaptive to their needs.

219

00:23:39,520 --> 00:23:44,880

So just lastly, before we end the interview, you mentioned earlier in the interview about

220

00:23:44,880 --> 00:23:50,480

perhaps in America, that people work more for themselves, their own reputation, whilst in

221

00:23:50,480 --> 00:23:55,280

Asia, it could be working for the greater good. But the same result is that you work

222

00:23:55,280 --> 00:24:01,200

for long hours, right? So for yourself, what's, how do you keep yourself motivated? What's the

223

00:24:01,200 --> 00:24:06,560

meaning of work aside from pay for a paycheck or for your own reputation?

224

00:24:08,080 --> 00:24:15,120

Well, first of all, the paycheck and the ROI, let's say, right? That I get out of it, I think

225

00:24:15,120 --> 00:24:22,400

I'm in a very fortunate position that we have flexible work hours. And I think the way you

226

00:24:22,400 --> 00:24:27,280

paraphrase what I said earlier, sounds rather drastic, like, oh, long hours and everything.

227

00:24:27,280 --> 00:24:36,800

No, it's more like there's an expectation also that I myself have, right? That I'm not necessarily

228

00:24:36,800 --> 00:24:45,120

always available, but I just deliver. And this doesn't have to come at like a nine to five or

229

00:24:45,120 --> 00:24:51,440

nine to eight or something rather than, no, it's like, I can perfectly balance this with, well,

230

00:24:51,440 --> 00:24:57,280

getting my kids to the doctor or picking them up from school, and then add something later,

231

00:24:57,280 --> 00:25:03,200

as long as the result is there. And that is something that I don't know if it's just a

232

00:25:03,200 --> 00:25:10,800

pooma thing or yes, I think it ultimately comes with the senior leadership has in you,

233

00:25:11,360 --> 00:25:17,680

the trust they have in you, right? Yeah. The freedom they give you. And that I think

234

00:25:17,680 --> 00:25:23,120

makes it for like a nice, well, I think we can say like work life balance, even though there

235

00:25:23,120 --> 00:25:28,960

probably is not really such a thing. It's more like, well, as you said, you need the money,

236

00:25:28,960 --> 00:25:38,320

and you need to deliver. It's more like, ideally at your own terms. Right? And that is what

237

00:25:38,320 --> 00:25:43,200

a pooma right now after you have you build your network and you have earned the trust.

238

00:25:43,200 --> 00:25:50,080

You have earned the trust. That is something that I right now enjoy very much. And that is where I

239

00:25:50,080 --> 00:25:56,640

don't really feel ever stressed. Other than, yeah, sure, there's a budget presentation for next year,

240

00:25:56,640 --> 00:26:02,560

and I have to work twice as hard. So, but is it stress? No, not necessarily, because I can

241

00:26:02,560 --> 00:26:11,440

really pick and choose when to travel, where to go, and when to actually put my foot on the gas

242

00:26:11,440 --> 00:26:20,480

pedal. Right? Yeah. As for the other thing, what I do for self branding is right now, not much,

243

00:26:20,480 --> 00:26:27,600

to be honest. I think you called because of an event, a Reuters event, where ultimately, I think

244

00:26:27,600 --> 00:26:34,320

once a year, I set myself up for one, twice a year, I think, that was my goal to get to a conference,

245

00:26:34,320 --> 00:26:42,880

maybe even speak at a conference. Right? But that's more also like a personal learning curve challenge.

246

00:26:43,760 --> 00:26:51,040

Get out there, network with people to learn from their experiences. Because I think ultimately,

247

00:26:51,040 --> 00:26:58,320

when you just talk to your own pooma people, your own agency people, there is the risk that you're

248

00:26:58,320 --> 00:27:06,480

sort of missing out on a lot of things. And that's where in those marketing forums and conferences,

249

00:27:07,760 --> 00:27:12,080

I like to get inspired. And I get inspired easily by because there are so many bright people out

250

00:27:12,080 --> 00:27:18,000

there. It's just mind boggling, to be honest, because you always think like, oh, sure, I've

251

00:27:18,000 --> 00:27:24,160

figured it out. Chances are you haven't. Or I haven't. Yeah. And then you can learn so much.

252

00:27:24,160 --> 00:27:29,440

And that's what I said, like the learning curve. For me personally, it needs to be steep at Puma,

253

00:27:29,440 --> 00:27:35,520

outside Puma. So I need the stimulus from outside. And it's not as much self branding other than

254

00:27:36,560 --> 00:27:42,800

that I really want to be inspired and learn more. There's so much more to learn.

255

00:27:43,520 --> 00:27:49,600

Well, it's been a pleasure talking to you, Herman. I wish I could invite you at another time to our

4 views0 comments

Comments


bottom of page