When one drills down further to learn more about this job category, more often than not it turns out that this position has a patent registration/prosecution focus. Sometimes the job category includes a patent strategy function, sometimes that task is either shared with or is the responsibility of another person within the organization. Be that as it may, trade marks trends to get "second chair" (or no chair) status under the patent counsel or IP counsel job category. Thus, while patent counsel interfaces with engineers, product development managers, and the like, in-house trade mark counsel will interface with a quite separate and distinct part of the company, such as marketing, advertising and corporate communication.
Two quite different situations result. The first is the phenomenon of the brand manager. Brands are variously defined, but all of the definitions have the common denominator that brands cover a broader swathe of company activity than do trade marks. For a trade mark attorney seeking to get out the second chair status, a promotion to the brand manager position is a relatively natural projection, even if it remains uncertain to what extent trade mark experience per se is the main prerequisite for the position. Because of this, a brand manager need not necessarily come from the IP prosecution world and, indeed, need not be an IP person at all.
This is so because it is the CFO, and not the marketing person, who usually has the last corporate word on the subject vis-à-vis outside counsel. The main driver for the CFO is, not surprisingly, usually the expense dimension of the process. This puts the marketing person in a delicate position. On the one hand, the CFO's preoccupation with the expense side means that the marketing person will have to toe the line on expenses as well. On the other hand, the marketing person will want to carve out her own identify in the process, particularly vis a vis outside counsel. A certain tension follows, particularly if the marketing person is unschooled in the trade mark registation.
Both in the brand manager situation and the corporate communication/CFO situation, one common denomonitor stands out. Both positions tend to be ignored when discussing how IP is organized and managed within the company (unless, of course, one is talking about a Dior-like company). Why this is true is less clear (perhaps it is a simple as the old adage that "real men do patents"). Whatever, the handling of trade marks within a company poses its own distinct organizational characteristics.