Warburton to leave customer and marketing chief post at Audi Australia

Premium automotive brand to announce a new marketing leader as Warburton heads for the exit after a three-year tenure

Audi Australia’s chief customer and marketing officer, Nikki Warburton, will leave the automotive group in July after a three-year tenure.

The company confirmed today Warburton had handed in her notice after a stellar three years which included overseeing customer, product and marketing for the last two. Warburton joined Audi Australia in July 2018 initially as chief marketing officer.

Her impact on the brand, market share and sales saw her recognised in the CMO50 of Australia’s most innovative and effective marketing leaders.

Audi Australia managing director, Paul Sansom, said Warburton’s contribution had been “tremendous” after joining during a challenging period for the business. He said the company had markedly grown sales volume and gained market share over the last two years, work that saw the brand recognised as the fastest growing premium brand in terms of buyer intention in Australia according to Kantar’s research. Audi was also named top premium automotive brand by Roy Morgan in the last 12 months.  

Nikki WarburtonCredit: NIkki Warburton
Nikki Warburton


“Nikki joined us in a difficult phase, characterised by delays in our product lifecycles, which resulted in significant untapped opportunity to further strengthen our brand in Australia,” he stated. “Since then, her team has exceeded all expectations in turning this around into the strong position we are in today.

“While we regret to see Nikki leave, we understand it is the right time for her to accept her next challenge, especially given the strength of the team she leaves behind.”

For her part, Warburton said she was ready for a fresh professional challenge. Warburton’s resume also includes working in marketing and advertising for Austar until its sale to Foxtel in 2012 as well as for the Astre Automotive Group encompassing Hyundai, Chrysler Jeep and Audi. She has also been a Women in TV mentor and is an executive patron for the foundation board of Taronga Zoo.

“I’m enormously proud of all we’ve achieved in the last few years, but I feel now is the right time for me to leave Audi’s future success in the capable hands of my team,” she said. “Audi is an incredible brand and I’ve had an amazing time helping it to shine as brightly as it does now, and I will always carry with e a great fondness for the fearless progress it has always stood for.”

A replacement marketing and customer chief is expected to be announced by Audi in coming weeks.

Don’t miss out on the wealth of insight and content provided by CMO A/NZ and sign up to our weekly CMO Digest newsletters and information services here. 

You can also follow CMO on Twitter: @CMOAustralia, take part in the CMO conversation on LinkedIn: CMO ANZ, follow our regular updates via CMO Australia's Linkedin company page

 

 

Join the newsletter!

Or

Sign up to gain exclusive access to email subscriptions, event invitations, competitions, giveaways, and much more.

Membership is free, and your security and privacy remain protected. View our privacy policy before signing up.

Error: Please check your email address.
Show Comments

Latest Videos

More Videos

More Brand Posts

Blog Posts

Marketing prowess versus the enigma of the metaverse

Flash back to the classic film, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. Television-obsessed Mike insists on becoming the first person to be ‘sent by Wonkavision’, dematerialising on one end, pixel by pixel, and materialising in another space. His cinematic dreams are realised thanks to rash decisions as he is shrunken down to fit the digital universe, followed by a trip to the taffy puller to return to normal size.

Liz Miller

VP, Constellation Research

Why Excellent Leadership Begins with Vertical Growth

Why is it there is no shortage of leadership development materials, yet outstanding leadership is so rare? Despite having access to so many leadership principles, tools, systems and processes, why is it so hard to develop and improve as a leader?

Michael Bunting

Author, leadership expert

More than money talks in sports sponsorship

As a nation united by sport, brands are beginning to learn money alone won’t talk without aligned values and action. If recent events with major leagues and their players have shown us anything, it’s the next generation of athletes are standing by what they believe in – and they won’t let their values be superseded by money.

Simone Waugh

Managing Director, Publicis Queensland

Sign in