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marketing executive jobs in ​worcestershire

At Beyond The Book we specialise in recruitment in the Creative, Marketing and Digital space, including Marketing Executives.
 
The role of a Marketing Executive can vary widely dependant on the company, sector and size of its marketing team but typically would be responsible for delivering a variety of elements of marketing. Usually, an Executive would not have responsibility for the overall management of marketing, budget management or strategy development and would report to either a Marketing Manager or more senior member of the team, such as a Senior Marketing Executive.

Depending on the role, business and size of the team, a Marketing Executive can work across marketing as a whole, focusing on a range of both offline and online elements, or may specialise in a particular area of marketing such as digital (SEO, PPC, email, paid search, social media, website management), PR, Communications, content, events, campaign, brand, ecommerce or acquisition, for example.
This type of role might be suitable for an existing Marketing Executive or Marketing Assistant or Marketing Coordinator looking to take the next step in their career.​​
As a Marketing Executive, the role would usually encompass the following responsibilities:
  • Campaign planning and delivery – email, social, SEO, PPC, search, affiliate, radio, television, mobile
  • Social media management
  • Analytics and reporting
  • PR and media – content production
  • Competitor analysis
  • Day to day website management
  • Events assistance or management
  • CRM management
  • Collateral production and design
​About Worcestershire
Worcestershire was first populated at least 700,000 years ago and was the heartland of the early English Kingdom of the Hwicce. Nowadays, the classic English country town of Worcester is the largest settlement known for its impressive cathedral. Other major towns in the county include Bromsgrove, Droitwich, Evesham, Kidderminster, Malvern, Redditch, and Stourport-on-Severn.
Possibly its most notable export is Worcestershire Sauce which was invented by chemists John Wheeley Lea and William Henry Perrins in 1837, hence the alternative name Lea and Perrins.
Worcestershire is one of three counties associated with the Border Morris style of English folk dancing. These were village dances performed in winter for fun and to entertain locals for money. It usually includes three to twelve dancers.
It is claimed that Worcestershire was the inspiration for The Shire, a region of J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional Middle-earth, described in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien was thought to have named Bilbo Baggins' house "Bag End" after his Aunt Jane's Worcestershire farm.