New RJR COO put dough riding on Joe.

PositionPeople - R.J. Reynolds Tobacco, Lynn Beasley - Brief Article

Lynn Beasley started smoking only after she was hired by R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. as a marketing assistant in 1982. She quickly set about winning other converts.

Five years later, as senior brand manager for Camel cigarettes, she helped create the cartoon figure Joe Camel. The ad campaign starring Joe won awards and boosted Camel's market share. Promotions followed for Beasley. In January came the 44-year-old's latest step up -- from head of marketing, her job for the last five years, to president and chief operating officer of Reynolds Tobacco. She took over COO duties from Andrew Schindler, chairman and CEO of both the subsidiary and its parent company, Winston-Salem-based R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings.

Beasley grew up on a Wisconsin dairy farm and came to Reynolds after earning a bachelor's in business administration and finance and a master's in marketing from University of Wisconsin. By the time she became senior brand manager for Camel in 1987, sales had sunk to 24.2 billion cigarettes, from a high of 100 billion in 1947. Worse, it had a reputation, based on the stubby, unfiltered smoke that had borne the brand since its beginning, as an old man's cigarette. Beasley's Joe Camel cartoon character, introduced late that year, turned filtered Camels into the hippest smoke since the Marlboro man rode onto the scene.

The campaign won praise from Beasley's marketing peers -- Adweek...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT