Walt Disney Company appoints its first-ever Chief Brand Officer

Apr 06, 2023 in "The Walt Disney Company"

Posted: Thursday April 6, 2023 12:30pm ET by WDWMAGIC Staff

Asad Ayaz has been named the first-ever Chief Brand Officer of The Walt Disney Company, effective immediately, it was announced today by Robert A. Iger, Chief Executive Officer.

In this newly created role reporting to Iger, Ayaz will be responsible for stewarding and elevating the Disney brand globally across the entire ecosystem of company touchpoints and consumer experiences. Ayaz will also continue as President of Marketing for The Walt Disney Studios, overseeing all aspects of marketing and publicity for the Studios’ films and series as well as for Disney+ globally, reporting to Disney Entertainment Co-Chairman Alan Bergman. 

Ayaz will be responsible for stewarding and elevating the Disney brand globally across the entire ecosystem of company touchpoints and consumer experiences. Ayaz will also continue as President of Marketing for The Walt Disney Studios, overseeing all aspects of marketing and publicity for the Studios’ films and series as well as for Disney+ globally, reporting to Disney Entertainment Co-Chairman Alan Bergman.

“Asad is an exceptional creative leader with a deep understanding of what Disney means to millions of people around the world,” Iger said. “His taking on this role is particularly noteworthy and consequential as we commemorate our historic 100th anniversary, and I am confident that his strategic, operational, and creative prowess, along with his profound passion for Disney, will make him an outstanding steward of our stories, characters, brands, and franchises.”

As Chief Brand Officer, Ayaz will develop and execute holistic brand marketing campaigns leveraging and synthesizing the company’s full suite of content and consumer experiences, activate the brand internally and externally through partnerships, and provide guidance and alignment for the company’s digital and social media strategy and presence. He will set corporate synergy and franchise priorities in consultation with the CEO and lead a global consumer research and analytics function focused on Disney’s brands and franchises that will inform actionable cross-platform initiatives.

“Throughout both my early life and my time at the company, I’ve marveled at the power of Disney’s storytelling, experiences, and simply the name itself to inspire people and resonate through generations,” said Ayaz. “I am immensely grateful to Bob for entrusting me with this opportunity, and I’m excited to work with the amazing teams around our company to highlight all the things that make Disney exceptional and ensure that we continue to create those meaningful connections with audiences for many more generations to come.”

Among other cross-company brand initiatives, Ayaz will oversee the Disney100 campaign as the company celebrates its 100th year. He recently led the development and creation of the Disney100 Special Look spot that debuted in this year’s Super Bowl, as well as the Studios’ new 100-year logo refresh now appearing on all Disney-branded films.

As President of Marketing for The Walt Disney Studios, a role he has held since 2018, Ayaz will continue to oversee all aspects of marketing for films and series from Disney, Walt Disney Animation Studios, Pixar Animation Studios, Marvel Studios, Lucasfilm, and 20th Century Studios, including strategy, creative advertising, media, digital, research, special events, promotions, international marketing, publicity, and synergy. He was also recently named to lead marketing for Disney+ globally.

An 18-year Disney veteran, Ayaz has developed and led marketing campaigns for some of the most successful film releases in history, including Lucasfilm’s “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” Marvel Studios’ “Black Panther” and the global phenomenon “Avatar: The Way of Water.” Additional campaigns Ayaz has spearheaded include Disney’s live-action hits “Aladdin” and “The Lion King,” Walt Disney Animation Studios’ “Frozen 2” and “Encanto”; Pixar’s “Toy Story 4” and “Turning Red”; 20th Century Studios’ “Free Guy” and “Prey,” along with Disney+ hit series including “The Mandalorian,” “WandaVision,” “Obi-Wan Kenobi” and “Loki,” among many others. In all, Ayaz has led the campaigns for the most watched films on Disney+ and Hulu, and 13 of the top 15 box office debuts of all time, including six opening weekends over $200 million, as well as the biggest worldwide debut of all time for “Avengers: Endgame,” which earned over $1.2 billion in five days.

An award-winning marketing leader, Ayaz has been the recipient of multiple industry honors, including Variety’s Marketing Visionaries Award and The Clio Marketing Mastermind Award. He was recently named one of Forbes Most Influential CMOs, and one of Fast Company’s Most Creative People in Business.

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BlakeW39Apr 09, 2023

Well right, it would be silly for a huge company like Disney, or even one of subsections like Marvel Entertainment or Lucasfilm, to cater to just one small fragment of their larger audience. But I definitely think those core fanbases are MUCH more important than Disney gives them credit for. Sure, they make up a small part of a company's consumer base and ultimately don't make up the largest share of their revenue either. But...longer term, they are the lifeblood of any intellectual property. Marvel. DC. Star Wars. Disney Parks. Universal even. They have importance in the way they influence the market and the success of a brand, and they do so in ways no other parts of a fanbase are able to. Casual Star Wars fans don't have strong opinions on the sequel trilogy, and if you were to ask them they'd probably say it was pretty good. But the box office much more closely mirrors the opinions of the hardcore fans who hate TLJ and then didn't see Rise of Skywalker. Ditto for Marvel and ditto for the parks— albeit those brands expectedly function a little differently. These niche fandoms are why companies need to strive for adaptational consistency (faithfulness to the OT or comic book 'accuracy,' as well thematic cohesion in the parks) and artistic depth. Like you said, treating their audience like they're stupid is getting Disney no where.

SirwalterraleighApr 08, 2023

Well that’s where you get tangled in the weeds… Disney is a MASS product. So while it would be fool - honestly - to cater to those who DO pick up comic books or dress like Chewie for fun…. …they have to bring that more mainstream WITHOUT turning the backbone off. Really isn’t that hard…use traditional themes, conflicts…heroes and villains…and don’t treat the audience as if they’re stupid. Easiest way to do that is to make the characters believe themselves in their portrayals and serve a purpose. No “box checking”…cause it’s fake.

BlakeW39Apr 08, 2023

Mmmm.... not really. I'm not necessarily talking about people who know absolutely nothing about what they consume. Those people are numerous for sure but they don't have much influence on the market at large, I think even Disney knows that. I moreso mean casual fans. People who enjoy or even consider themselves fans of the MCU for example, but probably have never even picked up a comic, nor do they even want to. People who have few if any strong opinions on what they consume and don't engage in analysis or criticism of any form of entertainment, whether that be Disney Parks, Star Wars, Marvel, Walt Disney Animation, etc.

SirwalterraleighApr 08, 2023

By “normies”…do you mean a transient general public that forgets a movie the minute they hit the door and don’t buy the product where the actual profit is made?

BlakeW39Apr 08, 2023

Lol, I love this. Particularly, "Disney has shown a determination - and now it appears It is on Iger - to try and redefine a fanbase who never once asked for it." Disney has completely alienated its core fanbases in its Star Wars, Marvel, and parks brands and it is astounding to me how little they seem to care. Apparently they think that normies outnumber us by so much that really, we don't matter.

donaldtooApr 08, 2023

I understand that, and was just chiming in. Awkward sometimes to just hop into these conversations. No worries on my part.

Chi84Apr 08, 2023

That’s valid. I was just responding to one particular post.

donaldtooApr 08, 2023

Nothing wrong with new ideas, but, Disney has demonstrated time and again that new ideas aren’t always better ideas.

SirwalterraleighApr 08, 2023

And it ultimately will. I’m more optimistic about this than most of their moves…so that’s “something”…I guess?

Chi84Apr 08, 2023

What if people favor opening up to new ideas?

DisneyJayBamaApr 08, 2023

Get rid of the wokeness. It’s not that hard.

TsWade2Apr 08, 2023

Um.....I'll just let the future answer my question!

SirwalterraleighApr 08, 2023

Yes…prior movies were good He directed the Indiana Jones movie yet to be released But BUT…this is classic KK…award performance that may not work. She loved Rian Johnson and frankly he couldn’t understand Star Wars less if he tried to on purpose. Just awful…it looks worse each day. Disney has shown a determination - and now it appears It is on Iger - to try and redefine a fanbase who never once asked for it. The word is hubris. Period. I hope at some point they’ll stop peeing into the wind

TsWade2Apr 08, 2023

Is he good?