Marketing Chief of Staff

Cohere

New York, NY

JOB DETAILS
SALARY
$155,000–$240,000 Per Year
SKILLS
Artificial Intelligence (AI), Budget Management, Budgeting, Business Operations, Business-to-Business (B2B) Marketing, Business-to-Business (B2B) Software, Cadence, Calendar Management, Campaigns, Candidate Qualification, Communication Skills, Cross-Functional, Data Management, Demand Generation, Enterprise Protection, Event Management, Finance, Firefighting, Follow Through, Grinding, High Tech Industry, Leadership, Legal, Machine Tool, Management Consulting, Marketing, Marketing Metrics, Marketing Plan, Mathematics, Operations Planning, Organizational Development/Management, Parallel Programming, Plumbing, Product Design, Product Marketing, Product Shipments, Product/Service Launch, Project/Program Management, Purchasing/Procurement, Reporting Dashboards, Sales, Spreadsheets, Time Management
LOCATION
New York, NY
POSTED
6 days ago

Who are we?

Cohere is the leading security-first enterprise AI company. We build cutting-edge foundation AI models and end-to-end products that are designed to solve real-world business problems.

We're training and deploying frontier models for enterprises who are building AI systems. We believe that our work is instrumental to the widespread adoption of AI and we are looking for folks that want to be part of that.

We obsess over what we build. Each one of us is responsible for contributing to increasing the capabilities of our models and the value they drive for our customers. Cohere is a team of researchers, engineers, designers, and more, who are all passionate about their craft.

We are a global technology company co-headquartered in Toronto and San Francisco, with key offices in London, New York City, Montreal, Seoul, Germany and Paris. Join us!

About the role

Were hiring a Marketing Chief of Staff to keep Coheres marketing org moving at full speed without coming apart at the seams. Youll report to the VP of Brand and work across the whole function: brand, editorial, design, product marketing, demand generation, and integrated marketing.

This is not a strategy-only role, and it isnt a glorified project-management seat either. In any given quarter the org is shipping product launches, field events, partner campaigns, and demand programs in parallel, often across regions and time zones. That pace is the reason the role exists. Your job is to make sure the right work wins when everything feels urgent, that plans turn into shipped work, and that the VP of Brand and the leadership team spend their time leading instead of firefighting.

Be clear-eyed about the shape of the work. A lot of it is operational: the planning calendar, the budget, the headcount plan, the weekly business reviews, the cross-functional handoffs that break when nobody owns them. The grind is the job. You should want that part, not tolerate it.

One boundary worth naming up front. Marketing Ops owns the systems: the MarTech stack, attribution, scoring, routing, data pipelines, and the reporting everyone runs on. Youll be the heaviest consumer of that work, not the owner of it. If you find yourself rebuilding dashboards or running a tooling migration, something has gone wrong. Your seat is the operating rhythm of the org: meetings, priorities, plans, and the decisions that come out of them.

Who you are

Youve run operations inside a fast, high-output B2B marketing org, and youve left it running better than you found it. You know the specific failure mode of a team thats shipping a lot and losing the thread, and you know how to pull it back without slowing everyone down.

You understand how marketing actually works, at the level of someone whos done it rather than managed it from a distance. You can talk credibly about how a campaign turns into pipeline, what account-based marketing demands from both sales and marketing before it works, and where demand-gen motions usually break. You dont have to have run every program yourself. You do have to understand them well enough that the people who run them respect your judgment.

Youre fluent in the numbers. Pipeline math, funnel conversion, budget-to-impact. You can read a marketing dashboard and tell whats real from whats been dressed up, and you say so. Building the reporting is Marketing Ops job. Yours is to use it well and push back when it doesnt add up.

You hold strategy and execution in the same hand. You can sit in a planning conversation with the VP in the morning and chase down a stuck deliverable in the afternoon, and you dont think the second thing is beneath you.

You write clearly and you communicate straight. People trust your readouts because theyre honest, not because theyre polished. When something is off track, you name it early.

You stay calm when its messy. A marketing org this active will hand you ambiguity every day. Your job is to turn it into a plan other people can actually follow.

What youll own

Operating rhythm and planning

Run the marketing orgs planning cadence: annual and quarterly planning, goal-setting, and the weekly and monthly business reviews. Hold the calendar.

Drive budget and headcount planning against the slate, working from Marketing Ops tracking and reporting, and keep both honest as priorities shift mid-quarter. You own the trade-off conversations; Marketing Ops owns the numbers underneath them.

Make the reviews worth holding. Drive the prep, the follow-through, and the decisions that should come out of them.

Priorities and cross-functional flow

Turn the VP of Brands priorities into plans the team can execute, then hold the line on those priorities when new fires start.

Keep major programs from colliding or stalling across brand, editorial, design, product marketing, demand gen, and integrated marketing. A lot of this is seeing the crash coming and preventing it.

Be the person teams come to when it isnt clear who owns a decision.

Connective tissue with the rest of the company

Represent marketing in cross-functional planning with sales, product, and finance, so the orgs commitments are realistic and its dependencies are visible. When marketing promises something to another team, you make sure the promise was sane and gets kept.

The systems plumbing behind that (lead routing, scoring, pipeline data) sits with Marketing Ops and RevOps. Your job is the planning and accountability layer on top of it. Youll also chase procurement and legal when purchases and projects stall.

Leadership leverage

Build the materials leadership relies on: board updates, all-hands content, exec readouts. Make them clear and honest, not decorative.

Give the VP of Brand back time and attention by carrying the work that doesnt need to land on their desk.

Special projects

Lead the things that dont fit neatly on any one teams plate: a reorg, a new agency relationship, a flagship event, an org-wide planning week. Own them end to end.

How success will be measured

Planning happens on time and means something. The slate is set, owned, and funded, and people can point to it.

Programs ship on cadence without running into each other. Fewer last-minute scrambles, fewer dropped handoffs.

Leadership gets time back. The VP of Brand spends more of their week on the calls that need them and less on the ones that dont.

Decisions run on the numbers. Reviews and planning work from the orgs single source of truth instead of side spreadsheets, and follow-ups actually close.

The org feels coherent. People know what theyre working on, why its the priority, and how it connects to the rest of the company.

What you bring

10+ years of operating experience, with real time inside a marketing org in a Chief of Staff, business operations, or senior program-operations seat.

A practitioners understanding of demand generation and account-based marketing in a B2B context. You can talk pipeline, not just plans.

Comfort with marketing and pipeline metrics and with running a budget. You can build the model and read the dashboard.

A track record of bringing order to a fast, complex org without grinding it to a halt.

Clear writing, straight talk, and the presence to hold a room of senior people to a plan.

Backgrounds wed be excited about

Chief of Staff or business operations at a high-growth B2B software or AI company.

A marketing ops or RevOps leader who wants an org-level operating seat rather than a systems seat.

Strategy or management consulting followed by an in-house operating role.

A demand-gen or integrated-marketing operator who has moved into an org-level operating seat.

Cohere is committed to fair and transparent pay practices. The salary range listed for this role reflects the expected base compensation. Actual compensation offered will be determined by factors such as location, level, job-related knowledge, skills, education, and experience.

For candidates based in the United States, the Compensation Range is : $155,000 - $240,000 USD

For candidates based in Canada, the Compensation Range is : $220,000 - $270,000 CAD

How and Where We Work:

  • Cohere is remote-friendly. We have offices in Toronto, San Francisco, New York City, London, Paris, Montreal, and more coming soon.

  • For those in the office: a daily lunch program, plenty of snacks, and regular community and social events.

  • For those not near an office: a co-working benefit so you can work alongside others in your city.

If any of the above doesn't line up exactly with your experience, we still encourage you to apply.

We strive to create an inclusive work environment for all; we welcome applicants from all backgrounds and are committed to providing equal opportunities. Should you require any accommodations during the recruitment process, please submit an Accommodations Request Form, and we will work together to meet your needs.

We may use AI-enabled tools to screen and assess applicants against the criteria for this position. This helps our recruiters identify potentially qualified candidates, but it doesnt limit the applications our recruiters may review or consider.

About the Company

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Cohere