Benjamin Li
May 6, 2010

Bite Communications China office appoints Lancy Ma as new MD

BEIJING - Bite Communications has hired Lancy Ma as the managing director for its China office, filling the role left vacant by Hua Foley at the end of last year.

Bite Communications China office appoints Lancy Ma as new MD
Based in Beijing, Ma (pictured) is responsible for overseeing Bite’s offices in Beijing and Shanghai, as well as nurturing and growing client relationships in China. She will report to Paul Mottram, Bite’s executive vice-president of Asia Pacific, based in Hong Kong.

Trained as an engineer, Ma is a 12-year China PR and marketing veteran and counts companies like H-Line Ogilvy, Shout, and e-commerce company YeePay Corporation among her former employers. Most recently she was deputy GM at Waggener Edstrom in Beijing for five years, overseeing the team’s technology and digital practices.

Bite Communications has a very strong IT client portfolio including Motorola, HP (which the agency won in Asia-Pacific, Europe and the Middle East last March) and WebEx by Cisco in China.

Ma points out that the agency also has a number of PR accounts in the public affairs and travel and culture industries including the newly acquired Queensland Government PR account for which they started work this month.

David Ketchum, president for Asia Pacific at Bite Communications, said: “Bite is well positioned to harness the power of off- and online communications to help multinational clients build their business in the PRC, and Mainland companies expand internationally via Bite’s global network.”

Founded as Upstream Asia, Bite first established operations in China in 2004. The 180-strong global communications consultancy has a presence in key Asian-Pacific business hubs including Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Sydney.

Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

22 hours ago

Google cuts 200 jobs in a core business unit

The redundancies are in a department responsible for sales and partnerships and part of a broader cost-cutting move as Google invests $75 billion in AI and data centres.

23 hours ago

Why sports marketing should lean into intimate, ...

In a world shaped by Gen Z and hyper-local engagement, the winning brands aren’t the loudest—they’re the ones that create authentic experiences that foster belonging and build trust.

23 hours ago

Is AI financially beneficial for agencies?

AI promises speed, efficiency—and fewer billable hours. So why are ad agencies investing millions in a tool that threatens their bottom line? Campaign Red digs into the tension between progress and profit.

1 day ago

How Want Want cracked Japan’s competitive confection...

Campaign speaks to Tony Chang of the iconic Taiwanese food brand to learn about the brand’s strategy in penetrating the Japanese market, and the challenges of localisation.