Director/VP (16-20 years)

Director, Experiential Marketing

As our Director of Experiential Marketing, you'll be the architect behind how our brand comes to life in the physical world. This isn't just about booking a booth; it's about crafting unforgettable experiences at trade shows, proprietary events, and field marketing activities that genuinely move the needle for our business. You're not just managing a team; you're shaping our market presence, ensuring every pound spent translates into tangible pipeline and brand affinity. Expect to be the go-to person for all things 'in-person marketing', driving strategy and execution across a diverse portfolio of events.

Job ID
JD-EVTS-DIREVX-006
Department
Events Experiential Marketing
NOS Level
Level 8
OFQUAL Level
Level 8
Experience
Director/VP (16-20 years)

Role Purpose & Context

Role Summary

The Director, Experiential Marketing, owns the entire strategy and execution for our company's physical presence in the market. This means everything from major global trade shows to intimate customer roundtables, ensuring each event aligns perfectly with our broader marketing and sales goals. You'll work at the intersection of brand, sales, and product, translating high-level business objectives into compelling, measurable experiences that resonate with our target audience. When this role is done well, we see a significant uplift in qualified pipeline, accelerated sales cycles, and a stronger, more recognisable brand in the market. When it's not, we're pouring money into events that don't deliver, damaging our brand's reputation, and missing crucial opportunities to connect with customers. The challenge is balancing creative vision with rigorous ROI, managing complex budgets, and leading a high-performing team through the often chaotic reality of live events. The reward? Seeing your strategic vision come to life, driving real business impact, and building a world-class experiential marketing function from the ground up.

Reporting Structure

Key Stakeholders

Internal:

External:

Organisational Impact

Scope: This role directly shapes our market perception, influences customer acquisition and retention, and is accountable for a significant portion of the marketing budget. You're driving multi-year transformation in how we engage with our audience in person, directly impacting pipeline generation and brand equity across the business unit.

Performance Metrics

Quantitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Event-Sourced Pipeline & Revenue
  2. Desc: The total value of sales pipeline and closed-won revenue directly attributed to experiential marketing activities (trade shows, proprietary events, field marketing).
  3. Target: Generate £10M+ in new pipeline and £2M+ in closed-won revenue annually.
  4. Freq: Monthly & Quarterly
  5. Example: In Q2, our events generated £3.5M in pipeline, leading to £750K in closed-won deals, exceeding the £2.5M pipeline target and £500K revenue target for the quarter.
  6. Metric: Program ROI (Return on Investment)
  7. Desc: The ratio of event-sourced pipeline/revenue to the total cost of the experiential marketing programme.
  8. Target: Maintain a minimum 3:1 pipeline-to-cost ratio and 1:1 revenue-to-cost ratio.
  9. Freq: Quarterly & Annually
  10. Example: Our annual programme cost £2M and generated £7M in pipeline, resulting in a 3.5:1 ROI, which is above our 3:1 target.
  11. Metric: Audience Engagement & Satisfaction
  12. Desc: Metrics measuring the quality of attendee experience, including booth traffic, session attendance, survey scores, and social media mentions.
  13. Target: Achieve >80% positive feedback in post-event surveys and >20% year-on-year growth in qualified booth engagements.
  14. Freq: Per Event & Quarterly Roll-up
  15. Example: At our recent flagship event, 85% of attendees rated their experience as 'excellent' or 'very good', and we saw a 25% increase in demo requests compared to the previous year.
  16. Metric: Budget Adherence & Optimisation
  17. Desc: How closely actual spend aligns with approved budgets, and how effectively costs are managed without compromising quality or impact.
  18. Target: Keep overall programme spend within +/- 2% of the approved annual budget, identifying 5-10% cost savings year-on-year.
  19. Freq: Monthly & Quarterly
  20. Example: Despite a major last-minute change, the Q3 budget was only overspent by 1.5%, and we successfully negotiated a 12% saving on our main AV contract for next year.

Qualitative Metrics

  1. Metric: Strategic Programme Alignment
  2. Desc: How well the experiential marketing programme supports overall company objectives, product launches, and sales initiatives.
  3. Evidence: Regular positive feedback from VP of Marketing and Head of Sales on event strategy. Events are consistently integrated into major GTM campaigns. Clear articulation of event contribution in executive reviews.
  4. Metric: Team Leadership & Development
  5. Desc: The ability to inspire, mentor, and develop a high-performing team, fostering a culture of ownership and continuous improvement.
  6. Evidence: High team engagement scores (>85%), low regrettable attrition (<10%). Direct reports consistently hitting their targets and taking on increased responsibility. Positive 360-degree feedback on leadership style.
  7. Metric: Innovation in Experiential Design
  8. Desc: The introduction of new, creative, and effective ways to engage audiences and deliver memorable brand experiences.
  9. Evidence: Successful pilot of new event formats or technologies. Industry recognition or awards for event design. Positive feedback from attendees and internal stakeholders on the 'freshness' and impact of experiences.
  10. Metric: Vendor & Partner Relationship Management
  11. Desc: The ability to build and maintain strong, mutually beneficial relationships with key agencies, suppliers, and event organisers.
  12. Evidence: Favourable contract terms and pricing. Proactive problem-solving with vendors. Vendors consistently going the 'extra mile' for us. Positive feedback from partners on collaboration and professionalism.

Primary Traits

Supporting Traits

Primary Motivators

  1. Motivator: Building and Leading a High-Impact Function
  2. Daily: You'll be defining the strategy for how we show up in the physical world, building out the team, and putting the processes in place to make it all happen. This means recruiting top talent, mentoring your managers, and setting the vision for what 'world-class experiential marketing' looks like for us.
  3. Motivator: Driving Tangible Business Growth Through Creative Experiences
  4. Daily: Your work will directly contribute to our sales pipeline and revenue. You'll be constantly looking for innovative ways to engage audiences, generate qualified leads, and accelerate deals, all while proving the financial impact of your efforts.
  5. Motivator: Strategic Problem Solving at Scale
  6. Daily: You won't just be fixing individual event issues; you'll be solving systemic problems across the entire programme. This involves optimising processes, negotiating enterprise-level contracts, and navigating complex internal and external challenges to ensure smooth, efficient operations.

Potential Demotivators

Honestly, this role isn't for you if you prefer a predictable 9-to-5. You'll be dealing with last-minute crises, managing demanding stakeholders, and often working long hours during peak event season. If you're someone who struggles with ambiguity or needs every detail to be perfectly buttoned down before you can act, you'll find this role frustrating. The reality is messier than the job description suggests, and you'll often be making decisions with incomplete information. If you're not comfortable with high-stakes situations where millions of pounds are on the line, this won't be a good fit.

Common Frustrations

  1. The constant battle to prove ROI for experiential marketing, especially when sales follow-up is inconsistent.
  2. Dealing with internal stakeholders who don't understand the complexities or costs of events and make unrealistic demands.
  3. The physical and mental toll of extensive travel and being 'on' for days at a time during major shows.
  4. Navigating the ever-changing landscape of event regulations, health & safety protocols, and supply chain issues.
  5. The challenge of finding and retaining top talent in a highly competitive events market.

What Role Doesn't Offer

  1. A purely creative role with no financial accountability.
  2. A predictable, low-pressure work environment.
  3. The ability to completely avoid travel.
  4. A role where you can delegate all difficult conversations.
  5. The luxury of having unlimited budget for every idea.

ADHD Positives

  1. The fast-paced, dynamic nature of event management, with constant new challenges and problem-solving, can be highly engaging for those with ADHD, providing a stimulating environment that prevents boredom.
  2. The need for rapid decision-making and quick pivots on-site often plays to strengths in quick thinking and adaptability.
  3. The variety of tasks—from strategic planning to on-site execution to post-event analysis—can keep interest high and prevent hyperfocus on a single, repetitive task.

ADHD Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Managing multiple, complex projects and deadlines simultaneously can be overwhelming. We can support with robust project management tools (Asana, Monday.com) and dedicated project coordinators.
  2. Maintaining focus during long strategic planning meetings or detailed budget reviews might be challenging. We encourage breaks, active participation, and providing pre-reads for focused input.
  3. The need for meticulous attention to detail in contracts and exhibitor manuals can be difficult. We'll ensure you have support from your team and robust checklist systems to catch critical items.

Dyslexia Positives

  1. Strong visual-spatial reasoning, excellent at seeing the 'big picture' of an event layout, flow, and brand experience.
  2. Often highly creative and innovative in designing unique experiential concepts and problem-solving on the fly.
  3. Exceptional oral communication and storytelling skills, which are vital for presenting strategies to leadership and engaging with partners.

Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Reading and processing large volumes of text, like detailed contracts or exhibitor manuals, can be time-consuming. We use tools with text-to-speech features and encourage verbal briefings or summaries from your team.
  2. Writing formal reports or detailed communications might require extra time. We can provide access to proofreading tools, AI writing assistants, and support from a communications specialist.
  3. Organising complex written information or data sets. We rely heavily on visual project management boards, templates, and clear, concise documentation standards.

Autism Positives

  1. A strong ability to identify patterns and logical inconsistencies, which is invaluable for optimising event processes and identifying inefficiencies.
  2. Exceptional focus and deep dives into specific areas of interest, such as data analysis for ROI or mastering event technology platforms.
  3. Often highly reliable and committed to delivering on promises, ensuring meticulous execution of planned strategies.

Autism Challenges and Accommodations

  1. Navigating complex social dynamics and unspoken expectations in high-pressure, multi-stakeholder environments. We encourage direct, clear communication and provide pre-briefs for key meetings.
  2. Unexpected changes or sensory overload during busy on-site event periods. We'll work to provide quiet spaces for focused work or breaks, and clear schedules of expected interactions.
  3. The need for frequent networking and 'schmoozing' with external partners. While important, we can balance this with opportunities for focused, task-oriented collaboration and leverage your team for broader social engagement.

Sensory Considerations

This role involves significant travel and time spent in high-sensory environments: bustling exhibition halls, loud event spaces, and busy airports. There will be bright lights, varied acoustics, and constant social interaction. On-site, you'll be on your feet for long hours. While we aim to provide quiet spaces for focused work and breaks where possible, the core nature of the role is in dynamic, often intense, physical environments.

Flexibility Notes

We offer flexibility around working hours outside of critical event periods, and a hybrid working model when not travelling. We're open to discussing specific accommodations to ensure you can thrive in this demanding but rewarding role.

Key Responsibilities

Experience Levels Responsibilities

  1. Level: Director, Experiential Marketing (16-20 years)
  2. Responsibilities: Define and own the multi-year experiential marketing strategy, aligning it directly with company-wide revenue goals, brand objectives, and product launch roadmaps.
  3. Lead, mentor, and grow a high-performing team of event managers and strategists (typically 3-8 direct reports), fostering a culture of accountability, innovation, and continuous improvement.
  4. Manage the entire experiential marketing P&L (£2M-£10M+), overseeing budget allocation, forecasting, and rigorous ROI analysis across all events and programmes. You'll present this to the board.
  5. Architect and optimise the end-to-end lead management process for all events, working closely with Sales and Marketing Operations to ensure seamless lead flow, attribution, and follow-up.
  6. Drive transformation in our approach to physical events, identifying and implementing new technologies, formats, and engagement strategies that differentiate our brand and deliver measurable impact.
  7. Build and maintain strategic relationships with key event organisers, industry associations, and top-tier agency partners, negotiating enterprise-level contracts and ensuring favourable terms.
  8. Present programme performance, strategic recommendations, and budget proposals to the C-Suite and Board, defending investments and showcasing the value of experiential marketing.
  9. Supervision: Fully autonomous on strategic direction and execution within the business unit. Reports to the VP of Marketing for high-level strategic alignment and objective setting. Expected to operate independently, driving significant initiatives without daily oversight.
  10. Decision: Full P&L authority for £2M-£10M+ experiential marketing budget. Authority over organisational design within the events team, including hiring, promotions, and performance management. Owns selection and negotiation of major agency and vendor contracts (up to £1M+). Strategic decisions impacting the entire business unit’s market presence.
  11. Success: Achieving ambitious pipeline and revenue targets from events. Delivering a strong ROI on all experiential marketing spend. Building a highly engaged and effective team. Consistently innovating our event approach, leading to increased brand recognition and market share. Successfully presenting programme results and strategic plans to C-suite and Board members.

Decision-Making Authority

Save 15-25 Hours Weekly: Supercharge Your Experiential Marketing with AI

Imagine cutting down on the tedious tasks that eat into your strategic planning time. AI isn't just a buzzword; it's a game-changer for Directors in Experiential Marketing. We're talking about automating the grunt work so you can focus on vision, impact, and leading your team.

ID:

Tool: Strategic Programme Optimisation

Benefit: Use AI to analyse market trends, competitor event strategies, and historical performance data to identify optimal event portfolios, predict ROI, and recommend strategic shifts for maximum impact. This means less guesswork, more data-driven decisions.

ID: ✍️

Tool: Executive Report Generation

Benefit: Feed post-event data, budget summaries, and lead metrics into an AI to automatically draft comprehensive executive reports and board presentations. Focus on refining the narrative and insights, not wrestling with formatting and data aggregation.

ID:

Tool: Advanced Contract Analysis & Negotiation

Benefit: Use AI to quickly review complex vendor contracts, identifying key clauses, potential risks, and areas for negotiation. It'll highlight unfavourable terms or missed opportunities, giving you a significant edge in securing better deals and protecting the company's interests.

ID:

Tool: Experiential Concept Ideation & Refinement

Benefit: Leverage generative AI to brainstorm innovative booth designs, engagement activities, and event themes based on target audience demographics and brand objectives. Use it to refine existing concepts, ensuring they're fresh, relevant, and impactful.

15-25 hours per week across your team's workflow Weekly time savings potential
Starting with 2-3 core AI tools, scaling up as needed Typical tool investment
Explore AI Productivity for Director, Experiential Marketing →

12-15 specific tools & techniques with implementation guides

Competency Requirements

Foundation Skills (Transferable)

As a Director, your foundation skills are about leading, influencing, and making high-stakes decisions. It's less about individual task execution and more about shaping the environment for your team to succeed, navigating complex organisational dynamics, and maintaining a strategic perspective.

Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)

Your functional skills at this level move beyond execution to strategic oversight, programme design, and leveraging technology for enterprise-wide impact. You'll be defining the standards and selecting the tools that your team uses.

Technical Competencies

Digital Tools

Industry Knowledge

Regulatory Compliance Regulations

Essential Prerequisites

Career Pathway Context

Typically, individuals entering this role would have progressed from a Manager, Trade Shows & Events position or a similar senior leadership role within a large-scale events or field marketing function. You'll have already proven your ability to manage teams and significant budgets, and now you're ready to shape the entire experiential strategy.

Qualifications & Credentials

Emerging Foundation Skills

Advancing Technical Skills

Future Skills Closing Note

Your role as Director isn't just about managing today's events; it's about building the experiential marketing function of tomorrow. Embracing these emerging and advancing skills will ensure you and your team remain at the cutting edge, driving maximum impact for the business.

Education Requirements

Experience Requirements

You'll need at least 16-20 years of progressive experience in experiential marketing, event management, or field marketing, with a significant portion of that time (minimum 5-7 years) in a leadership role managing teams and multi-million pound budgets. We're looking for someone who has designed, executed, and measured large-scale global event programmes and can demonstrate clear ROI. Experience presenting to C-suite and Board members is essential.

Preferred Certifications

Recommended Activities

Career Progression Pathways

Entry Paths to This Role

Career Progression From This Role

Long Term Vision Potential Roles

Sector Mobility

The skills developed in this role—strategic P&L management, team leadership, high-stakes project delivery, and proving ROI for marketing investments—are highly transferable. You could move into broader marketing leadership roles, general management, or even take on executive positions in companies specialising in event technology, agency services, or other experience-led industries.

How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development

DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis

Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.

Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.

DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway

Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).

Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.

DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning

Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.

Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."

DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment

Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.

Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.

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