Jane Leung
Jun 1, 2010

General Motors puts MRM in charge of digital

HONG KONG - General Motors has handed MRM Worldwide a digital dashboard project for the US market, which will be led by MRM APAC in Hong Kong.

General Motors
General Motors
The MRM Data & Analytics Asia-Pacific division in Hong Kong will work closely with MRM’s Detroit office to build a digital dashboard detailing GM’s US digital marketing performance.  Mark Woodcock, Asia-Pacific Regional Director of Data & Analytics at MRM Hong Kong said: “We’re building one of the biggest and most sophisticated digital dashboard builds for any client, anywhere.”
 
The Data & Analytics team in Hong Kong supports regional clients like Dell, adidas, Johnson & Johnson, Intel, Gap, Goodyear and Exxon Mobil.
 
GM shifted its digital production from Digitas’ Prodigious Worldwide to MRM Worldwide at the end of last year. The five-year deal is said to worth US$100 million. In the US, MRM Supply is assigned to release 50 new websites globally. For this region, the operation is headquartered in Shanghai under General Motors International Operations (GMIO), which oversees Asia-Pacific, Europe, Latin America and South America.
Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

14 hours ago

Nearly 70% of bias incidents in AI LLMs occur in ...

The study also reveals that 86.1% of bias incidents required only a single prompt, underscoring how easily AI models can still produce biased outputs despite advances in safety.

15 hours ago

How Knorr used retail media to drive conversions

CASE STUDY: Unilever brand Knorr teamed up with The Trade Desk and foodpanda on a retail-data campaign that achieved more than 12.9 million impressions, exceeding the brand's goal by more than 70%.

16 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Thanzyl Thajudeen, Mark and Comm

A seasoned PR expert and founder of Mark and Comm, Thajudeen has transformed his Colombo-based agency into a leading regional player.

16 hours ago

Meta begins firing ‘lowest performing’ staff

Notices began going out to employees in most countries including across Asia this week, as the tech giant prepares to cut approximately 5% of its workforce based on performance.