
Manager, North America Digital Account Manager, Visa Direct
- San Francisco, CA
- $124,600-180,650 per year
- Permanent
- Full-time
- 5 or more years of relevant work experience with a Bachelors Degree or at least 2 years of work experience with an Advanced degree (e.g. Masters, MBA, JD, MD) or 0 years of work experience with a PhD
- 6 or more years of work experience with a Bachelors Degree or 4 or more years of relevant experience with an Advanced Degree (e.g. Masters, MBA, JD, MD) or up to 3 years of relevant experience with a PhD
- 3 or more years of work experience with a Bachelor’s Degree or more than 2 years of work experience with an Advanced Degree (e.g. Masters, MBA, JD, MD)
- 2 years’ experience in customer success, marketing or account management roles, particularly in supporting cross-functional global processes, communications, tools, or other key analytics
- Experience in supporting cross-functional program initiatives and facilitating collaboration across Sales, Account Management, Marketing, Finance, Product, Legal and Customer Service organizations
- Exhibits strengths as a cross-functional navigator and consensus builder, with high financial acumen and analytical skills
- Must be results-oriented, organized, able to handle multiple urgent tasks and must effectively deal with ambiguity in a virtual work environment
- Exceptional influencing & presentation skills - thinks strategically to problem solve tactical execution, particularly in a growing matrixed organization
- Strong desire to win as a team – pride of outcome mentality vs pride of ownership
- Knowledge and experience with Visa products, FX and Global Payments seen as a plus
- Familiarity with Tableau, AI tools and/or MS Dynamics seen as a plus
- Experience prioritizing and managing a book of business and being accountable for quarterly metrics
- Demonstrated success leading centralized communications deployment and driving adoption, growth and retention
- Self-starter with a ‘can-do’ attitude who excels in high-paced environment, thrive in change and ambiguity