Google welcomes people with disabilities.
This role is not eligible for immigration sponsorship.
As an Associate Product Marketing Manager (APMM), you will be part of the APMM Program, Google’s global program for early career Marketers. During your time in the program, you will work on priority marketing projects in your organization, develop a breadth of marketing skills, join a strong community of peers and alumni, and be supported by dedicated mentors and senior leaders. In addition to your core work, you are expected to complete learning and development milestones, attend APMM programming, and actively contribute to the APMM community.
This APMM role is in the Greater China Marketing organization.
You will be assigned marketing projects within the Greater China Marketing organization supporting their business goals and you’ll make direct contributions under the scope of a larger project, with general guidance. For example, you may help advocate for the user in the product development process and/or develop the go-to-market plans for driving awareness and adoption for new products and features among target segments. You may drive growth marketing and optimization, contribute to Google’s brand strategy, generate user insights, and/or manage campaigns and programming.
Benefits of the program include: dedicated learning and development opportunities, at least 2 distinct project assignments and extensive opportunities for networking across Marketing and within Google.
Know the user. Know the magic. Connect the two. At its core, marketing at Google starts with technology and ends with the user, bringing both together in unconventional ways. Our job is to demonstrate how Google's products solve the world's problems--from the everyday to the epic, from the mundane to the monumental. And we approach marketing in a way that only Google can--changing the game, redefining the medium, making the user the priority, and ultimately, letting the technology speak for itself.
Google’s mission is to organize the world‘s information and make it universally accessible and useful.
Since our founding in 1998, Google has grown by leaps and bounds. From offering search in a single language we now offer dozens of products and services—including various forms of advertising and web applications for all kinds of tasks—in scores of languages. And starting from two computer science students in a university dorm room, we now have thousands of employees and offices around the world. A lot has changed since the first Google search engine appeared. But some things haven’t changed: our dedication to our users and our belief in the possibilities of the Internet itself.