Let Your Partners Speak.
Yondjé Choi Cornez heads Partner Marketing for Google Pixel B2B, building and activating the global ecosystem of carriers, retailers, and OEM partners that takes a device from factory to consumer. She brings deep experience in Samsung partner ecosystems and a conviction that cultural intelligence is the most underrated competitive advantage in global marketing.
“Let your partners speak for you. Your brand talking about its own value only goes so far.”
Yondjé Choi Cornez is Head of Partner Marketing for Google Pixel B2B, where she builds and activates the carrier, retail, and OEM partner ecosystem that takes Google’s flagship smartphone from device to market. She brings over a decade of experience building partner marketing programmes at Samsung, Android, and Google across global markets.
Choi Cornez spent eight years at Samsung, working on carrier and retail partner programmes that gave her deep fluency in how complex partner ecosystems actually function. Her move to Google brought her to the Android platform side before her current role with Pixel, where the partner channel is not just a distribution mechanism but a storytelling vehicle.
Her perspective on global marketing is shaped by years of navigating the cultural differences between Korean, American, and European business contexts. She uses a simple principle: get your basics right before you try to localise. Understanding how a culture works, how partners in that market prefer to communicate, and how consumers in that region make decisions is table stakes for any global programme.
“There is always a discrepancy between what consumers say and what they actually do.”
“Partners have their own relationships with audiences that a brand talking about itself cannot buy.”
Carriers, retailers, and OEM partners have their own relationships with their audiences. Those relationships carry trust that a brand talking about itself cannot buy. Choi Cornez’s partner marketing philosophy is built on amplifying partner voices rather than using partner channels to broadcast brand messages.
“Get your basics right. Just know the meaning of the culture and how people work.”
Korean partners appreciate hierarchy and formal protocol. German markets require different positioning than French or Dutch ones. American marketing assumptions travel poorly. The teams and brands that invest in genuine cultural intelligence, not just translation, consistently outperform those that localise aesthetics while leaving the underlying message unchanged.
“There is a discrepancy between what consumers say they want and what they actually do.”
Consumer research is valuable. It is also systematically biased towards socially desirable answers. The brands that win are the ones that test behaviour rather than rely on stated preference, and build products and campaigns around what people actually do rather than what they say they will do.
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