It seems that the Saudi bought the sale of Bud Light Fire.
The unfortunate Marketing Executive who shuddered in the Bud Light brand has achieved a new work golf, in an unlikely match between a corporate awakening warrior and the controversial sports league backed by Saudites.
Liv is staying to Mom about her decision to hire former Anheuser-Busch vice president, Alissa Heinerscheid, who has been working in the League in a “commercial equipment operations” role since then, according to her LinkedIn page.
Heinerscheid’s reputation became a radioactive after his dismissal of Bud Light, where his aroused brand change crusade, including a widely transmitted association with the transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, cost more in sales and one billion. One billion.
When she was contacted by the position, LIV Communications Director, Ilana Finley, declined to comment on the decision of the League to hire Heinerscheid, but a former Executive of Anheuser-Busch said she probably pounced on snatching her.
“I suppose that Liv could probably get someone relatively economical to join them and take part of their experience working in the largest bear company,” Anson Frericks, a former Heerinerscheid’s colleague who has been the mail of that time.
Frericks, who went to the recently of the brand problems in his new book “Last Call for Bud Light”, wrote that Heinerscheid was “one of Dei’s main defenders” in the company, and “never hid its progressive policy” in the years that worked together.
But he told The Post that the rent is not necessarily a sign that Liv Wags wakes up, it is just a mutual benefit for both parties.
“Liv is already inherently controversial, and that is likely to be disseminated in some cases recruiting the maximum talent,” Frericks said, pointing out the Saudi Funds of the League. “So he has the opportunity to redeem himself, and LIV has the opportunity to have someone who has experience in the management of brands of one billion dollars.”
Alissa obviously made a mistake, but frankly I believe in the second opportunities and I am supporting it, “added the former colleague.
Others rush so fast to encourage Heinerscheid Mulligan’s career after his high profile smell in Bud Light.
“The lady who almost destroyed the Bud Light brand is now in Liv Golf. Huge victory for the PGA!” He tweeted a user.
“If you are out of work, remember, there is always an opportunity for you,” Matt Reigle wrote in Outkick. “Heinerscheid helped design one of the most dead marketing campaigns in brain in human history, and she got another job within a year. You will be fine.”
The news of the new Heinerscheid concert collected traction in X earlier this week, almost exactly two years since he directed the unfortunate team of Bud Light with Mulvaney, which led to a boycott of months of the All-American beer brand.
The Public Relations Fiasco enraged the customs, which rejected the brewers with such fiercely that Bud Light was destroyed of his hanger as the best -selling bear in the United States and remains in third place today, behind model and Michelob Ultra.
The consequences led to profit losses of up to 30%, reducing the space on the shelves in the stores, the layoffs of the company and the permanent damage to the beloved decades.
In the midst of the reaction of the disastrous campaign, Heinerscheid was hammered by comments that arose from a podcast interview in which he revealed his intentions to make Bud Light more awakened.
In the capsule, the then VP called to the reputation of beer as “fratty” and “out of contact”, and promoted “inclusion” and “representation” as the keys to transform the image of Bud Light.
The Bud Light Anheuser-Busch parent company placed a license in April 2023 in response to the controversy. The ex -Exec LinkedIn page shows that the company left permanently in November 2023.
Reached by text, Heinerscheid did not respond to the request for comments from the publication.
The professional golfer Greg Norman, the former LIV CEO responsible for taking off the League in 2022, also refused to comment on the hiring of Heinerscheid when the position was reached.
The typically open Australian golf legend remains on the LIV board of directors since he delivered the reins to the current CEO Scott O’Neil.
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