🍪 Basic Information about Cookies

We use our own and third-party cookies to provide statistical data and browsing habits of users; this helps us improve our content and services, and even show advertising related to user preferences. You can enable these cookies by clicking the "Accept Cookies" button. If you prefer to keep these cookies disabled, click the "Reject Cookies" button. You can even enable and disable the ones you prefer by clicking the "Customize Cookies" button. More information in our Cookies policy

Marcus Collins

Chief Strategy Officer (Ex- CSO at Wieden+Kennedy NY) | Best-selling Author | Culture Scholar | Chief Strategy Officer | Forbes Contributor | MG100

Marcus Collins

Dr. Marcus Collins is an award-winning marketer and cultural translator. He is the former chief strategy officer at Wieden+Kennedy, New York, a marketing professor at the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan, and the author of the best-selling book, For The Culture: The Power Behind What We Buy, What We Do, and Who We Want To Be.

Marcus is an inductee into the American Advertising Federation’s Advertising Hall of Achievement and a recipient of the Thinkers50 Radar Distinguished Achievement Award for the idea most likely to shape the future of business management. His strategies and creative contributions have led to the launch and success of McDonald’s cultural resurgence, Google’s “Real Tone” technology, the “Made In America” music festival, and the Brooklyn Nets move from New Jersey to New York, among others. 

Before his advertising tenure, Marcus worked on iTunes + Nike sports music initiatives at Apple and ran digital strategy for Beyoncé. He writes a column for Forbes’ CMO

Network, and contributes to business scholarship.

COURSES TAUGHT BY THIS LECTURER:

mastercourse
·
online
·
eng
open
·
BY
AMS

Brand Strategy

masterclass
·
online
·
eng
open
·
BY
AMS

Back to The Future: The Evolution of Brand

SUBSCRIBE ME TO THE NEWSLETTER
Select your subscription list based on your interests
Hoala Amsterdam
Hoala Spain