Leaving or being fired ? We see who has the most influence on this headline.

CB

^^^^^^^

GM's top U.S. ad executive leaving

Jackson, during one turbulent year on the job, drove automaker's online
advertising.

Sharon Terlep / The Detroit News

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With a style that was far more L.A. glitz than Motown grit, Mike Jackson
came to Detroit determined to transform the stodgy image of General Motors
Corp. and pull the automaker into the age of the Internet.

His mission would be short-lived.

After barely one turbulent year on the job, GM announced Thursday that
Jackson, GM's top North American advertizing executive, is leaving the
automaker.

GM released a brief statement but gave no reason for Jackson's abrupt
departure, saying only that he is leaving on June 15 "to pursue other
opportunities."

One of the highest-ranking African-American executives at the automaker, the
50-year-old ad whiz oversaw unprecedented change in how GM promotes its
cars, trucks and corporate image.

"That position can either be one that blends into the woodwork or one that
is a lightning rod for change," said former ad executive Peter DeLorenzo,
founder and publisher of Autoextremist.com. "He made some changes based on
what he felt was right."

In his job overseeing advertising for GM's eight brands and its corporate
image, Jackson led a massive shakeup, yanking a number of
multi-million-dollar ad accounts from companies that had been doing business
with GM for decades.

He gave GM's $200 million Saturn account -- held for years by Goodby,
Silverstein & Partners -- to Interpublic Group's Deutsch/LA. Also to Deutsch
went GM's corporate account and pieces of the Chevrolet business, once
exclusively held by Campbell-Ewald, whose 93-year relationship with
Chevrolet spawned the "Heartbeat of America" campaign in the 1980s.

Beyond ad agency switches, Jackson drove GM to invest more in online media,
a move industry watchers said was not always well-received from within.

While GM reduced overall ad spending by 10 percent last year, the automaker
spent more to market on the Web, according to Nielsen Monitor-Plus. GM is
the nation's No. 2 advertiser behind consumer products company Procter &
Gamble Co.

Earlier this year, Jackson was the brainchild of GM Style, an L.A. Style
celebrity fashion show on the banks of the Detroit River to lead into this
year's North American International Auto Show.

The event was based on a similar bash GM hosts in Los Angeles before the
Academy Awards.

"Throughout his tenure, Mike has contributed to GM's improved product image,
and brought a creative approach to GM's market presence," according to the
statement from GM marketing chief Mark LaNeve.

Before coming to Detroit, Jackson headed up GM's regional marketing in Los
Angeles. He previously worked for Coors Brewing Co.

The managers and support staff who reported to Jackson will now report to
LaNeve. GM has no immediate plans to replace Jackson.

It'll likely take years, DeLorenzo said, before it becomes clear whether the
changes Jackson made will pay off for GM.

"It's too early," he said, "to know how those changes are really going to
shake out."

You can reach Sharon Terlep at (313)223-4686 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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C Copyright 2007 The Detroit News. All rights reserved.

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