Client Account Manager, App Dev Enterprise
crypto:applicationengineeringM2Mid Market & SMB
Compensation
Not disclosed
Reddit is a community of communities. It’s built on shared interests, passion, and trust, and is home to the most open and authentic conversations on the internet. Every day, Reddit users submit, vote, and comment on the topics they care most about. With 100,000+ active communities and approximately 126 million daily active unique visitors, Reddit is one of the internet’s largest sources of information. For more information, visit www.redditinc.com .
We're looking for a Client Account Manager to join our App Dev Enterprise team in New York. Our App Dev team partners with Mobile App Developers globally, consulting clients on how to successfully grow their businesses by leveraging the best of Reddit’s platform capabilities. This team also partners with our XFN product and tech teams to represent their clients’ interests, influencing the future of Reddit ads.
In this role, the Client Account Manager will nurture client partnerships by leading campaign strategy, execution, optimizations, and, reporting to drive measurable business outcomes. Our Client Account Managers also play a key role in proactively identifying and pitching upsell opportunities to help advertisers derive the most value from their marketing on Reddit and grow their overall book of business.
Please note that this role is required to work in person from our New York City office 1-2 days per week.
Responsibilities:
Client Partnership Growth
Collaborate with Client Partners to meet or exceed your clients’ marketing goals
Proactively manage and deepen relationships with existing advertising partners and their agency counterparts to drive year-over-year revenue growth
Be a trusted partner by advising clients on their full funnel objectives, especially with mobile app marketing, and crafting thoughtful and creative media plans
Ownership of brand and media agency education, office hours, and performance check in’s, effectively communicating Reddit’s value proposition, solutions, and best practice