Cotton Incorporated Creates CMO Role, Unifies Marketing Teams to Support ‘Demand-Building Mode’

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Cotton Incorporated Creates CMO Role, Unifies Marketing Teams to Support ‘Demand-Building Mode’

As it looks to stimulate demand for cotton across the supply chain, Cotton Incorporated is bolstering its marketing and brand positioning efforts with the creation of a chief marketing officer role.

Following a lengthy and “intensive” search that “cast a very large net” to the industry and adjacent fields to find the right candidate, the cotton research and promotion organization has appointed Bev Sylvester as CMO to lead its marketing strategy. Sylvester, who starts on Feb. 2, comes to Cotton Incorporated with more than two decades of experience in marketing and branding across apparel and textiles, consumer goods and branded materials. She was most recently at synthetic fiber maker Unifi, where she led marketing for the producer’s Repreve recycled polyester across the supply chain.

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Cotton Incorporated sees Sylvester’s experience aligning with its own position as an ingredient brand. “[Bev] brings a lot of great experience at the fiber level, but also interactions and engagements with manufacturers, brands and retailers, so it’s a great fit,” William Kimbrell, president and CEO of Cotton Incorporated, told Sourcing Journal.


Bev Sylvester


William Kimbrell

Calling the CMO position “critically important,” Kimbrell explained that Cotton Incorporated is in a “demand-building mode.” Putting more emphasis on marketing and bringing it into the C-suite complements the work happening across the organization to drive cotton demand, including agricultural research, sustainability efforts and fiber competition initiatives.

“The scale of Cotton Incorporated’s work is tremendous—from textile research to product development to agronomy, to name just a few areas—and the opportunities to market those outputs to a diverse range of stakeholders is unique in our industry,” Sylvester said, pointing to this as one of the factors that appealed about the role.

A key competitive target for Cotton Incorporated is synthetic materials, and the organization leverages material science, sustainability research and fiber performance insights to differentiate itself from inputs like polyester, protecting cotton’s share in core categories—like denim—while bringing it into areas that are more typically made from synthetics—like active leggings.

Acknowledging the challenges cotton has faced in maintaining market share against synthetics—partly due to pricing—Kimbrell said Sylvester’s previous work in this competing segment of the industry is expected to support the organization’s efforts to drive cotton demand and adoption. “Bev coming from the synthetic world, she brings a lot of experience in knowing what those brands and retailers have been looking for and can help us out with positioning cotton in a good way for showing some of those natural solutions that maybe historically have come from the synthetic side,” he said.

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