CAT Prep

RTI Response

Rankings

Placements

Score Vs. %ile

Salaries

Campus Tour

Upskill

Career Show

My Love Story With Marketing | Summers At Coca Cola

Aug 7, 2020 | 11 minutes |

Join InsideIIM GOLD

Webinars & Workshops

Compare B-Schools

Free CAT Course

Take Free Mock Tests

Upskill With AltUni

CAT Study Planner

CUET-PG Mini Mock 2 (By TISS Mumbai HRM&LR)

Participants: 418

CUET-PG Mini Mock 3 (By TISS Mumbai HRM&LR)

Participants: 176

CUET-PG Mini Mock 1 (By TISS Mumbai HRM&LR)

Participants: 770

MBA Admissions 2024 - WAT 1

Participants: 242

SNAP Quantitative Skills

Participants: 515

SNAP Quant - 1

Participants: 952

SNAP VARC Mini Mock - 1

Participants: 950

SNAP Quant Mini Mock - 2

Participants: 361

SNAP DILR Mini Mock - 4

Participants: 245

SNAP VARC Mini Mock - 2

Participants: 440

SNAP Quant Mini Mock - 4

Participants: 187

SNAP LR Mini Mock - 3

Participants: 250

SNAP Quant Mini Mock - 3

Participants: 207

SNAP VARC Mini Mock - 3

Participants: 298

SNAP - Quant Mini Mock 5

Participants: 54

XAT Decision Making 2020

Participants: 449

XAT Decision Making 2019

Participants: 349

XAT Decision Making 2018

Participants: 448

XAT Decision Making -10

Participants: 588

XAT Decision Making -11

Participants: 457

XAT Decision Making - 12

Participants: 417

XAT Decision Making - 13

Participants: 352

XAT Decision Making - 14

Participants: 354

XAT Decision Making - 15

Participants: 397

XAT Decision Making - 16

Participants: 468

XAT Decision Making - 17

Participants: 511

XAT Decision Making 2021

Participants: 518

LR Topic Test

Participants: 2742

DI Topic Test

Participants: 1241

ParaSummary Topic Test

Participants: 2107

“You find love when you least expect it.” I remember finding out about my love - marketing, sitting in a TCS interview during my 2nd year of undergraduation. “Hey Swareena”, called out my interviewer, “We found your HR round very interesting but have you ever considered doing an MBA after graduation?” Firstly,that is the politest rejection I have received, interview or otherwise. Secondly, no, I had not considered an MBA as a possible career option. So, I went back home that day, searched the courses a B-school offers and there, staring at me, unaware of my undivided attention, was -  marketing. I searched about the job description of a marketer and I was surprised to find that I was attracted to a respectable career option for the first time in my life. Fast forward to my 3rd year, now that I had stalked (done my research on) my one sided love affair, I took marketing electives to see if it could possibly love me back. By the end of the semester, my grade sheet confirmed that it was indeed a match made in heaven. By the final year of my undergraduation, I had realized that the only way to get out of my toxic relationship with engineering was to go after my love and appear for CAT 2018. I still remember the way I used to steal the little time between my college classes and the coming back from lunch breaks early, only to be able to make some time to prepare for CAT during my long college hours. Time flew and on 25th November, 2018, as I walked out of my CAT examination hall, I called up my mother, crying, telling her that I had done so poorly in the Quant section that I would have to reappear for CAT in 2019. Little did I know, everyone that year did poorly in the Quant section and I did score a 99.05%ile afterall. On January 4th, 2020, my dream institute, IIM Calcutta sent me an email inviting me over for an interview. To say the least, I (and my parents, more so) was thrilled. I remember telling my panelists I wanted to do an MBA to be reunited with my love, marketing. They must have been convinced because on April 16, 2019, I knew I had made it. :) I started my journey at Joka determined to make it into the top tier marketing firms. I spent the first two months in my new campus meeting (read : networking with) my batchmates and my immediate seniors. It took me only a few meetings to realize that the B-school placement buzz word was - Consulting, not marketing and firms like McKinsey & Company, Bain & Company and Boston Consulting Group (BCG), abbreviated as MBB, were considered sacred. Be it the sheer number of students who competed for these firms or the selectivity with which these firms shortlisted resumes, everything made the entry into a consulting firm gruelling and all the more desirable. I would be lying if I said never eyed consulting. In fact, in the first 2 months itself, I had my CV reviewed by 15-20 seniors who interned across different consulting firms and by August, I, like many others, had the names and faces of MBB PPO (pre-placement offer) holders memorized. Simultaneously, I also learnt about the numerous marketing firms that visited our campus the previous year and started building an alternate CV that I could send to marketing firms. I have always believed that most learnings happen outside classrooms and my time at IIM Calcutta has nothing but reinforced this belief. One of the major lessons that I learnt in the first three months of my MBA was to manage time. So even when I spent my evenings meeting my seniors and understanding the imminent placement process, my daytime was spent attending classes. In my first term itself, I had the pleasure of learning a beautifully taught course,  Marketing Management, taught to us by the marketing genius himself (and my personal favourite), Professor Krishanu Rakshit. Even today, the learnings from the course have stayed with me and the course came out to be one of the many reasons why I was not swayed into opting other (sought after) career options like Finance and Consulting. Then came September and one of the many (and the only one I had the pleasure of experiencing) perks of consulting firms is that they release the list of students shortlisted for further rounds relatively early. Fortunately or unfortunately, I did not secure a spot in the firms I was eyeing and hence, the need to resolve the dilemma between choosing consulting and marketing never popped up and I wholeheartedly began my preparation to secure a marketing role. My preparation for marketing roles included aspects that groomed me for both, group discussions (GDs) and interviews, both equally crucial elimination rounds. For group discussions, I tried best to attend most, if not all, mock GDs conducted by our seniors on campus. I maintained a diary to track the feedback that I received after every mock round and tried to implement it in subsequent mocks. However, the part that stood out to me the most during my preparation was the time I allotted to my individual preparation. I divided my limited time for self-preparation equally into two parts - industry analysis and company analysis. For conducting industry analysis, I thoroughly researched the relevant market trends, consumer sentiment and market leaders (in terms of market share) across industries like Beauty & Personal Care, Health & Wellness, Food & Drinks among others. This helped me deepen my understanding of consumers, their preferences and the wide portfolio of products available to cater to these preferences. To do an in-depth company analysis, I visited official company portals of all major recruiters like Hindustan Unilever, Procter & Gamble, ITC, Johnson & Johnson, AB InBev and made a note of their company objectives, product portfolios and their sustainability initiatives. This element of my preparation not just added value to my arguments in my group discussions but helped me make relevant, data backed points in my interviews. As the placement season started, I was thrilled to find my name in all marketing shortlists, with an exception of one or two firms. But the struggle had just begun. As the companies started pouring in, I found myself moving from one room to another, closing in on 10-15 GDs in a single day, taking mini-meals in between, for two consecutive days thriving on little to no sleep. The incident that I cherish the most during this gruelling process was one where I was shortlisted for the group interview rounds of two major recruiters at the same time - AB InBev and Hindustan Unilever (HUL). I remember coming out of the GD process of AB InBev and as they told me to stay back for the group interview round, the placement team informed me that I was being called for the HUL Group Interview (GI) too. Since this was going to be AB InBev’s last Group Interview round, I decided to stay back to interview for AB InBev and informed my friends to keep track of the ongoing HUL process. As I went inside the closed doors of the interview, I hardly knew what was happening outside. HUL had decided to wrap up early and like a lot of other marketing enthusiasts, this firm’s interview was very important to me, something my friends were highly aware of. As I was giving my AB InBev’s interview, my friends tried to push my interview slot with HUL as much as they could and when they could do it no more, they pressured the placement team to get me released from AB InBev. I remember a placement coordinator coming into the interview room of AB InBev when the interview was almost over and requesting the interviewers to release me for another process. As I came out of my room, I saw 5-6 familiar, friendly faces all telling me to urgently run to the floor above and started running with me. I did not know what was happening but I kept following them and as I reached outside another interview room, one of my friends just whispered, “You are about to enter the final Group Interview round before HUL wraps up, all the best.” I was panting and beaming at my support system as I entered the room. Even though I did not make it through the GI round at HUL, I was glad I was able to appear for the process and utterly grateful for my support system at Joka. Even after the two hectic days lined up with GDs, sleep completely evaded me as interview shortlists started coming in hours after the GD rounds ended. Instead of sleeping, I revised my marketing notes and industry trends and got dressed for the day I was going to be placed. My first interview was with ITC and even though I thought my interview went decently, I could not get through. Without losing hope, I went on to the next interview room, a room filled with people who were going to be my recruiters, employees of The Coca Cola Company. During the GD round of The Coca Cola Company (TCCC), they had attempted to do something different from the other recruiters. Instead of conducting a regular GD, they went ahead and divided the 10 students in a room in two groups. The groups were then given a target consumer and his consumer profile. We were given a total of 10 minutes to come up with a product/service aimed at the consumer along with the Go To Market Strategy for the product/service. Not just that, we were provided with whote boards, charts and sketch pens to demonstrate our ideas. After such a creative GD process, I was looking forward to an interesting interview round and TCCC did not disappoint. While they had tested my marketing acumen in the GD round itself, the interviewers in the Personal Interview Round were very friendly. We talked about why I was attracted to marketing, where I saw myself in the coming years and what I did in my free time. Something must have clicked because I saw myself interning at The Coca Cola Company in 2020 and as I worked with one of the most creative marketing teams to have existed, I finally got into the career I loved. Ever since I started my internship, I was surprised looking at the ownership the company gave to its employees. In my first week, I came to know that I was going to work at Coca-Cola’s Campaign for ICC's upcoming T20 World Cup. I was blown away by the amount of responsibility they believed I could shoulder in the forthcoming two months. Even though the T20 World Cup has been postponed and is no more going to happen in 2020, my campaign scope was designed to stay relevant in any year the World Cup is conducted and hence, any work I did in this domain is confidential. All I can say is not just was my project very interesting, even the support system offered by the company was admirable. I remember having daily hour long conversations with my manager, Sameer Pathak, General Manager, Activations Team at TCCC and how no one was ever too tired to talk to me or resolve doubts I had. I even managed to stand out in one of the many activities weekly conducted by the company, My 60-Day Internship Journey and got awarded the best journey that I demonstrated in the form of a snakes-and-ladders board with snakes being the various obstacles I faced and ladders being the growth curves I inherited along the way. Check out the image attached to see what my journey looked like! All in all, what a ride. As of now, it has been two months since my internship ended and I am not just in regular touch with my fellow interns but also my manager who keeps sending me movies, articles, magazines and anything that he finds interesting. Even though PPO results are still not out, I had a wonderful time as an intern and learnt enormously in the domain I loved. What more can I ask for?