Global Brand Marketing Manager, Google Pixel
Google · San Francisco, CA | New York City, NY | Los Angeles, CA | Washington, DC
About this role
Google is hiring a director-level Communications Manager in the marketing function based in San Francisco, CA | New York City, NY | Los Angeles, CA | Washington, DC. The posting calls out experience with Android. Compensation is listed at $142,000–$205,000 per year.
- Role
- Communications Manager
- Function
- marketing
- Level
- director
- Track
- Management
- Employment
- Full-time
- Location
- San Francisco, CA | New York City, NY | Los Angeles, CA | Washington, DC
- Posted
- May 15, 2026
More roles at Google
Job description
from Google careersWhether you're on a consumer product (like Gmail, Search, Maps, Chrome, Android) or a business product (Google Ads, AdSense, Google Marketing Platform, Analytics), you take part in a complete marketing experience as you lead every facet of the product's journey. From determining positioning, naming, competitive analysis, feature prioritization and external communications, you help shape the product and help it grow a consumer base. This means you work with a cross-functional team across Sales, corporate communications, legal, webmasters, product development, engineering and more. In this role, you'll be involved with product marketing strategy from beginning to end.
In this role, you will develop Pixel’s brand loyalty strategy and GTM plan, including our loyalty drops and fans programs and ambassador programs, product integrations, development of global talent and sponsorship briefs, and development of content for social, CRM, and more.
Know the user. Know the magic. Connect the two. At its core, marketing at Google starts with technology and ends with the user, bringing both together in unconventional ways. Our job is to demonstrate how Google's products solve the world's problems--from the everyday to the epic, from the mundane to the monumental. And we approach marketing in a way that only Google can--changing the game, redefining the medium, making the user the priority, and ultimately, letting the technology speak for itself.