CA$120K - CA$160K/yr
Full-time
Posted 23 days ago
Job description
BWZ is growing, fast. We're actively diversifying into new business segments, revenue streams and looking to operationalize our processes more effectively with AI.
We're hiring a Strategy & Operations Manager to be the person who brings order to that messy middle. You'll report to our COO and work closely with our VP Finance and VP Tech/AI to install real project discipline across the business, own the end-to-end build of zero-to-one initiatives, and produce the analysis and business cases that let leadership make good decisions quickly.
Who You Are:You're someone who likes to build things. You've probably worn a lot of hats - maybe you started a business, have experience working across a wide variety of roles and disciplines or have taken a different route entirely! Either way you're experienced across the breadth of operations, marketing, and product.
You have a clear point of view on how work should get done and you're comfortable driving cross-functional partners toward a structured process without coming across as a bureaucrat.
You like ambiguity because it means you get to build the answer. You're analytical enough to model a business case but practical enough to know when a napkin math estimate will do. You've used AI to make yourself faster at everything you do, and you know enough about what modern software can do to ask the right questions of the tech team - even if you're not writing production code yourself.
You're broadly competent across functions and impatient with meetings that don't move toward a decision.
What You'll Be Doing:- Owning the end-to-end build of zero-to-one initiatives - you'll take new product pilots and iterations from idea to launch, running the costing, lead time, pricing, and go-to-market work yourself
- Installing project discipline across leadership initiatives - making sure business cases get built before things ship, decisions get documented, owners are clear, and cross-functional partners actually follow through
- Acting as the business-case clearinghouse - when a department head has a half-baked idea for a new product, program, or team, you're the person they go to to pressure-test it and turn it into something leadership can say yes or no to
- Supporting the VP Finance on FP&A for new products - revenue projections, cost structures, break-even and sensitivity analysis (you won't own FP&A, but you'll be the analyst on new-product models)
- Designing and standing up scorecards and dashboards - starting with content performance and expanding from there
- Being the architect when we spin up a new team or department - scoping responsibilities, doing light internal org design, and handing off to the incoming lead
- Unblocking the COO so they're not the bottleneck on every cross-functional project.
- Value Delivery Rate (primary) - % of key thrust initiatives hit their defined success criteria each quarter (revenue, efficiency, or engagement)
- Execution Coverage - % of key initiatives with defined scope, owner, timeline, success criteria, and active tracking + reporting in place
- Efficiency Impact - measured improvement in unit economics or operational efficiency from the initiatives you support each quarter (margin %, cost per output, time saved per workflow)
- Supporting indicators - # of business cases delivered per quarter, forecast accuracy on initiatives (revenue, cost, timeline variance vs. plan), 2-3 key initiatives supported per quarter, leadership confidence in initiative readiness, and post-launch review completion rate
- Experience in program management, product management, business operations, or strategy-and-ops roles - ideally in a smaller or scale-stage business rather than a big corporate
- A project/program discipline background - you know how to run a structured delivery cadence and keep peers aligned and on-track without relying on direct authority.
- Solid business modeling skills - revenue, cost, and margin work in Excel or Sheets
- Comfort diagnosing messy cross-functional problems and proposing a path forward
- High degree of AI fluency: you've shipped automations or agent workflows yourself (n8n, Make, custom scripts), structured prompts beyond the chat window, and can articulate model trade-offs and failure modes.
- Able to engage with technical systems as a peer. Can comfortably read JSON, basic SQL, and webhook/API docs. You won't ship production code, but won't be a black-box client to the tech team either
- Strong data analytics and business intelligence chops (SQL, dashboarding, and comfort with BI tools such as Looker, Power BI, etc.)
- MBA or equivalent cross-functional breadth
- Prior founder experience (successful or otherwise - either counts)
- Background in media, content, or adjacent businesses
- Direct FP&A or finance experience
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Frequently asked questions
Q: What skills or qualities help someone succeed as a Operations Manager?
A: To succeed as an Operations Manager, key technical skills include proficiency in project management tools, data analysis software, and supply chain management systems. Essential soft skills include strong communication and leadership abilities, as well as adaptability and problem-solving skills to navigate complex operational challenges. These strengths enable Operations Managers to effectively oversee daily operations, drive process improvements, and make informed strategic decisions, ultimately supporting career growth and long-term success in the role.
Q: What is the career path for a Operations Manager?
A: A typical career progression for an Operations Manager involves starting as an Operations Coordinator or Assistant, then advancing to Operations Manager, and eventually moving into senior roles such as Director of Operations or Vice President of Operations. Key opportunities for skill development and professional growth include developing project management, leadership, and analytical skills, as well as learning about supply chain management, logistics, and process improvement. Long-term career prospects for Operations Managers may include transitioning into executive leadership roles, pursuing careers in consulting, or leveraging their expertise to start their own businesses.
