Scott Leatherman: An Inspirational Leader Solving Complex Market Challenges through Innovative Ways
The 10 Most Influential Marketing Leaders to Watch in 2022
Scott
Leatherman is the Chief
Marketing Officer at Veritone, Inc., and is an award-winning
full-stack marketing executive with over 20 years of leadership and company
management experience.
Scott
spends a lot of his time at Veritone collaborating with the marketing and sales
teams on new strategies to increase engagement, alignment, and revenue. In
addition, he makes three to four sales calls each week on average but wishes he
could make more. Scott says, “From the company’s martech vendors to its
service bureaus, Veritone has a world-class team and vendors.”
Scott’s
mission at the company is to provide the groundwork for the company’s martech
stack to be rebuilt, data integrity to be improved, and brand strategy to be
aligned, all while guiding a skilled team of marketers, partner managers, and
sales development representatives. Veritone uses AI/ML technologies to solve
some of the world’s most difficult problems. Scott states, “What you
are reading on CNBC, CNN, and Fox daily is what the Veritone team is
addressing.” The company’s mission is to make green energy more
efficient; to make local law enforcement more transparent; to assist tens of
thousands of people in finding meaningful jobs; and to innovate in the
metaverse to enable new commerce and communities for everyone.
Scott wants
the bulk of Veritone’s brand awareness to come through demand
generation, customer voice, and its ecosystem.
A True
Marketer
Scott has
always been a marketer, from selling Otter Pops door-to-door when he was nine
years old to starting a screen printing business in college. He enjoys telling
a narrative that brings people together. His ability to combine his sales-oriented
mindset with creativity and martech has resulted in a perfect storm of potential,
technology, and creativity.
According
to Scott, B2B should and will lead consumer marketing in terms of immersive/Web
3 marketing technology adoptions. When he receives an email from an anonymous
vendor informing him that they have sent him a present in an attempt to gain
access to his calendar, it frustrates him. He says, “We have the
ability to know how, when, and why to approach people—sending me a box of
chocolates or gift card for Door Dash is lazy marketing.”
A Short
Summary of Early Life
Scott
received his first job from his personal network a year before graduating. He
was employed at CKS, and his college teachers were sending him their resumes in
the hopes of finding work there. Scott was being invited by the GM of the business to meetings with
clients that he had no business being in, based on his expertise and pay grade,
early in his career. He
recalls, “When it was openly asked once why I was in the meetings, the
GM said, Scott is the guy who just gets things done. You will want him at this meeting.”
That has always stuck with Scott as the highest compliment. He asserts, “It
sounds simple, but we all know being a problem solver is a powerful position on
the team.”
Scott’s
first ten years were at startups; two of these startups were SAP-backed. So
when SAP acquired Virsa in 2006, he stayed on with SAP for 10 plus years where
he enjoyed 3 different careers within SAP. He was sent to Israel to meet with
businesses and the government, and he fell in love with startups and serial
entrepreneurs all over again. He shares, “I had to travel halfway
around the world to rediscover Silicon Valley, where I have lived my whole
life.”
Work
with Gratitude and Respect
Scott’s
mother, who raised him and his two brothers as a single mother, taught them to
see the bright side of life. As part of a financial aid program in elementary
school, he had to serve other students lunch and clean up. He learned early in
life that “the more you treat the people who serve you with the same (or
more) respect, the more they want to help you.” By the time he left, he
knew the families of the principal, the lunch staff, and the landscapers by
name. He says, “My time behind the lunch counter enabled me to build
relationships that helped me every day and probably even avoided some
punishments, too.”
On Work-Life
Balance
Scott
states that his wife is a workaholic, so, his long days, weeks, and months just
seem like normal life to her. In full transparency, she has taken several
business calls during dinner. He asserts, “When we aren’t working, we
like to go for drives (windshield therapy) where we talk about personal stuff,
work stuff, and silly stuff. We make it work.”
For his
team, Scott reminds them that family and health come first. He tries to work
with them around their schedules—if that is a 5 AM text or a 9 PM call—he wants
to remove any barrier he can for them to feel good about their team, their
impact, and their success.
Success That
Comprises Everyone’s Growth
As a team
leader, Scott believes that long-term success is defined by his colleagues’
professional and personal development, while short-term success is defined by
reaching revenue targets. “Attribution through martech is crucial,”
he says. “When you have a transparent culture, you will have a good
culture. As an adviser, I’m working with a number of martech businesses to
disrupt, accelerate, and measure contemporary B2B for the benefit of both my
team and the industry.”
Future
of Veritone
Scott’s
leadership philosophy is based on ‘leadership through service.’ Instead of
expecting staff to make you look good, he advises that you should help them
shine, push them to achieve, and applaud their accomplishments. Anyone who says
“that’s below my pay grade” has no respect in his eyes. He
believes that if anything has to be done for the organization to succeed, you
should be the first to pick up the slack. He intends to continue to champion
personal and professional development cross-functionally at Veritone while
further establishing Veritone as a AI leader. He says, “I will do everything I can
to retain the team we have now and continue to add diverse as we progress.”