Bombardier Inc. has replaced its commercial aircraft marketing chief as the Canadian transportation company works to accelerate sales while it struggles to complete its first direct challenge to Boeing Co. and Airbus Group NV, according to a company spokesman.

Vice president of commercial aircraft marketing Philippe Poutissou left the company yesterday, along with an additional commercial operations director as part of broader changes to the marketing division, according to a person familiar with the change.

A Bombardier spokesman confirmed Mr. Poutissou's departure, but said the company was "not going to explain or discuss the change."

Ross Mitchell will take over as head of marketing the company's commercial aircraft, which includes the new larger CSeries and regional jet and turboprop products, the spokesman confirmed following an earlier report by The Wall Street Journal.

Mr. Mitchell has held various sales positions across both commercial and business aircraft units, most recently as vice president of business acquisition for Bombardier Business and Commercial Aircraft.

Mr. Poutissou didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

The CSeries jetliner was originally due to airlines at the end of 2013, but slipped while the company matures the jet's systems and software. The aircraft made its first flight in September 2013, but has been grounded since late May following a major engine failure on one of its CSeries test aircraft at its Mirabel, Quebec facility.

No one was hurt during the incident, but the flight test program has been subsequently grounded as engine manufacturer Pratt & Whitney test and develop a modification to the engine's oil system. Bombardier made no changes to its most recent schedule and has maintained that the jet will still enter service in the second half of 2015, an expectation that predates the engine failure. Pratt & Whitney is a unit of United Technologies Corp.

The 125 to 160 seat jetliner is aimed at challenging the smallest jets from Airbus and Boeing, which has prompted an aggressive competitive response from the aerospace industrial giants to keep the all-new CSeries from gaining market traction.

In late July, Bombardier reorganized its corporate structure, splitting its aerospace operations into a business aircraft and commercial aircraft units and eliminated the chief executive role of its once-combined aerospace unit, while adding a new engineering and services pillar. A fourth transportation unit, focusing on its train business, remains a stand-alone unit.

Write to Jon Ostrower at jon.ostrower@wsj.com

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