Strategy & Operations Senior Manager, Australia

Whatnot Whatnot · Consumer · Sydney, Australia · Commerce & Operations

Strategy & Operations Senior Manager for Whatnot's Australian market, focusing on post-purchase operations, user experience, and driving business decisions across the marketplace ecosystem. This role involves setting strategy, implementing changes, leading cross-functional initiatives, and providing data-driven recommendations to senior leaders.

What you'd actually do

  1. Set and drive the strategy for post-purchase operations, partnering closely with Product, Engineering, and Operations to deliver scalable, high-quality experiences for Whatnot’s Australian users
  2. Translate insights from operational data and user interactions into priorities, roadmaps, and initiatives that improve quality, speed, and scalability
  3. Partner with the Global Commerce team to implement changes that improve the overall user experience. Own the execution end to end
  4. Lead complex, cross-functional initiatives from problem definition through execution, ensuring alignment, accountability, and measurable outcomes
  5. Design and implement scalable processes, systems, and operating models that support Whatnot’s growth and evolving user needs

Skills

Required

  • Strategy and operations experience
  • Analytical judgment
  • Cross-functional initiative leadership
  • Process and systems design
  • Stakeholder management
  • Data analysis and reporting tools

Nice to have

  • SQL
  • Looker
  • Sigma
  • Hex
  • Understanding of the Australian market nuances

What the JD emphasized

  • 8 - 10 years of experience in strategy and operations roles
  • Proven experience developing and executing strategies that drive scalable, high-quality operations in ambiguous, fast-paced environments
  • Demonstrated success leading large, cross-functional initiatives from concept through execution
  • Ability to identify operational inefficiencies and design scalable processes, systems, and operating models that support long-term growth