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MARGOT
TORRES
VP – MARKETING
MCDONALD’S
Education:
A.B. Psychology, Ateneo de Manila University
What makes
your brand different from others? What makes it
unique?
What’s
going for us is we are one of the most loved brands
in the world. Working for a company with a mega-brand
like that is very inspiring especially if you’re
in marketing. McDonald’s has always
been known for quality, service, cleanliness, and
value. That’s a McDonald’s
term: QSC + V. Everybody’s guided by those
principles. We assure our customers that the place
and food are clean and the food is good.
McDonald
has 244 branches in the Philippines and can be found
in 180 countries.
It really caters
to all markets A-D, from ages 0-85.
In the beginning,
it adopted the model from the US. For the first
time, it opened everybody’s eyes to fastfood.
It became the model of [every fast food] that you
see today. From AB, it went down to broad C and
now to D. Several factors contributed to that.
One is distribution.
Lumalabas na siya sa Metro Manila. Key
cities na rin: Cebu, Davao, Baguio, Pangasinan.
We also introduced locally developed products that
are not available in other countries but are also
Filipino-inspired, like Burger McDo which is a more
affordable burger that uses a sweet sauce. Then
you have McSpaghetti which children just love. Then
you have Chicken McDo, our fastest selling product,
you know that the Philippines is fried chicken country.
What are the
challenges facing your industry now and how do you
meet them?
We operate in the
IEO (informal eating out) industry that is not fine
dining. Our competition does not just consist of
other quick-service (QSR) restaurants. The
QSR segment has, in what we call terms of visits
or eating out, has shrunk from 50 percent of the
total eating out to 30 percent. Because it shifted
to other IEO places like the carinderia
and the rolling stores. Then there were the convenience
stores which were opened during the wee hours of
the morning. Then it shifted to bakeries and doughnut
shops and these are not your branded ones. These
are the unnamed ones selling cheese bread for ten
bucks. There are just so many options already.
On the other hand,
mas maraming kumakain sa labas. You eat
more times in a day including the midnight snack.
May mga young adults who go home tired
from commuting, magluluto pa ba sila?
The other challenge
specific to McDonald’s is
that the number of stores we have is only half of
the market leader’s. Our distribution is at
a disadvantage at the moment. We are addressing
that by opening stores in better, strategic locations.
We don’t want
to saturate an area where you don’t want to
eat in each other’s markets.
A viable
area is one that can sustain the sales day in day
out. McDonald’s
is not a Disneyland where you just go one time and
just for special occasions. It’s an everyday
fastfood restaurant that offers a wonderful experience
aside from great food. Hindi lang weekends
lang kapag dinadala ang mga bata, or birthday
or Christmas. If the trading area has no offices
or schools or hospitals, mahirap iyon.
We have superior
delivery service. We have online, SMS.
You can order through SMS now and pay through your
mobile phone. Delivery is your way of bringing food
to the customer without a store in the area. We
also have dessert kiosks at the MRT and the malls,
which serve desserts specifically.
Please
tell us about your career path.
There are two big
chunks in my career. The first phase is the consumer
marketing phase. Fresh out of college, I joined
Unilever then known as the Philippine Refining Company.
I stayed there for five years, I started in research,
went to brand, did media and brand management and
product management, learned the ropes. After that,
I had a short stint in an ad agency. I gave up and
have never gone back since. It’s not just
my cup of tea. From the agency, I went back to client
management. I did a distributor stint with Zuelig.
That ends the first phase.
At that point, I felt
I had done agency, research, brand, beverage, and
personal care. I stopped and took a sabbatical for
two months. I told myself that I will go into a
new industry when I return.
When I came back,
I was deciding upon credit cards and telecommunications.
I joined Philippine Wireless, the company
behind Pocketbell, and spent six years there.
I did marketing and sales in Pocketbell; that was
my first exposure to sales which I think helped
me a lot. I believe that if you have not
done sales, you cannot be a great marketing person.
Then I got married.
Kailangan maghanap ng pera!
(laughs) I moved to Extelcom, the only analog phone
company left; it was owned by a multinational cellular
company that gave it a little more prestige. From
there, they asked me to set up Express Internet.
This was my first exposure to dot-com.
At that point, I was
given a chance to join Edsamail, a growing dot-com
company that was gonna go public. At that time,
it was a whole adventure wherein we all thought
we would be like Bill Gates. I was the General Manager
for Edsamail.
I told myself –
I was 33 years old then – “ngayon
ko na gagawin.” Because if it
doesn’t work, at 35, I can go back to the
corporate world. After a year, we got the top ten
advertisers in our client list. The business model
was fantastic. It’s free email with advertising
as revenue, until the Board changed the model. It
was frustrating because I believed so much in the
vision of Edsamail. I had the right background
as media, advertising, marketing, and technology,
that I could make it the GMA-7 of the Internet.
That was my dream. But other forces took over and
they wanted to charge at that point. We were just
gonna be another ISP. It wasn’t my line to
handle operations and worry about collections.
I went back into marketing
in a pharmaceutical company in 2002. I think I moved
too early because I felt that the pace was not too
exciting. I was then offered by Smart Telecommunications
to join their team. It was the most exciting proposition
that I left the balanced life of the pharmaceutical
company and joined Smart as the Senior Marketing
Manager of Postpaid and E-load. I started the projects
on Infinity and Smart Kids and continued Addict
Mobile.
After five months
of not seeing my kids, I said this was not for me.
A headhunter came along. They told me, “McDonald’s
invited us to pitch. You are our only candidate.
If you say no, we will not pitch.” This was
2003. I was having a hard time balancing my family
and career. So, I said, “Go and pitch.”
By 2003, I moved to McDonalds. By 2004, we had our
best year ever. We’ve hit our sales and operating
income target and surpassed it. And in the history
of our company since we’ve been here, they’ve
given incentives to their employees.
What
makes you marketable? You don't seem to have a problem
finding very good work.
[It comes from] the
discipline of Unilever. When you’re a fresh
grad from this company, and Unilever gets you from
the top five percent of your batch, lamang ka
na. The foundation is right. Maganda ang
discipline, proseso, process management,
basic marketing principles. Ang kailangan mo
baliin is the idealism that everything works
in the company. Because everything is so systematic
in Unilever. Kung hindi ka mag-a-adopt, patay
ka. You can’t stay there [in your new
company after Unilever] and cry like a spoiled brat.
That’s why headhunters
wait for these fresh grads [from Unilever] to move
to another company so the rigidity will be softened.
For example, galing ako sa Unilever, pumunta
ako sa agency---(grins at the memory) klieyente
ko San Miguel Corp, maniwala ka, mayabang
pa ako sa manager nila! In my twenties,
I’d offer to teach him how to write an advertising
brief! But after nabali ka sa ibang kumpanya,
lumalalim ang experience mo.
The other aspect now
is that you will find very people who understand
technology and marketing and can put that together.
Kaunti na lang who have that discipline
that is in Unilever and jumped into technology.
I feel that
I am very effective in McDonald’s because
I have the discipline of consumer marketing and
the perspective of service. I can marry the two.
That’s why I feel I have found my place.
What
gives you your edge?
We believe
in research. That’s why we’re in touch
with our customers. I believe in talking to the
people in the stores. I don’t limit myself
to this industry. I’m interested
in what’s happening in telecommunications,
pharmaceuticals, I pick up on a lot of things and
current events.
What advice
would you give young supervisors and managers who
want to rise the same level you do?
Let me answer that
by telling you a story. One of my people left. I
was grooming her but I didn’t stop her. She
wanted to go to a telco. She said, “McDonald’s
has been my main marketing experience for three
years. I want to enrich my marketing knowledge by
going to another industry.” I could not argue.
My advice would be:
whether you stay in the company forever or move
around, it’s always to push the envelope.
That’s the only way creative ideas come about.
And you should never be afraid of change.
I never accept
the answer, “Iyan
ang ginawa namin dati” or “Hindi
iyan nag-work dati.” Because
everything changes. Maybe because at that time,
it was too early. The minute you feel it is a routine,
you should get scared already.
My greatest
fear is to be a dinosaur. During
one time, I was a young VP, the fresh blood in a
family-owned corporation where the VPs rose from
the ranks. In one management committee meeting,
we were talking about the second-line of managers.
They were complaining about the quality of the people,
and I blurted out, “The problem is, we don’t
believe in this philosophy: training your replacement.”
What
else would you like to do? Where do you go from
here?
Here in McDonald’s,
I personally believe that this brand can
be number one in this country. That is my personal
goal.
After that, if I feel
that marketing has become a routine and I’ve
trained my replacement, I’m interested
in the franchising/real-estate side of the industry.
What’s interesting is the customer who invests
P25 million.
I want to
grow my roots in McDonald’s. There are so
many avenues you can take. One, although not on
the top of my list, is that you can go to another
country that has McDonald’s and work on something
that is regional or global in scope.
Although I
know that my specialization and expertise in marketing,
I don’t want to grow vertical in marketing.
I prefer to know the rest [of the industries].
THINK YOU
HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO BE A HIGH-POWERED EXECUTIVE?
Send your resume to eportfolio@jobsdb.com.ph.
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