Babar Khan Javed
Apr 9, 2018

GroupM replaces MEC with Mediacom in Pakistan

With market forces preventing Maxus and MEC from merging to form Wavemaker, GroupM chose to abolish MEC as a trading desk and place the entire team in Mediacom.

MEC's entire team has been shifted to Mediacom.
MEC's entire team has been shifted to Mediacom.

GroupM has replaced MEC with Mediacom in Pakistan.

While a global realignment at GroupM resulted in the merger of Maxus and MEC to create Wavemaker, Fouad Husain, the CEO of GroupM Pakistan, decided to shift the entire MEC team to Mediacom.

In Pakistan, Mediacom will be led by Kashif Malik, previously the head of MEC since February 2016.

According to Husain, Mediacom's creation provides GroupM clients with new global planning capabilities.

"MediaCom clients will also be able to leverage parent company, GroupM’s specialist expertise, providing a dramatically more comprehensive service in areas such as digital, programmatic buying and analytics," he said.

Husain expressed optimism about the launch of Mediacom in helping enhance GroupM's brand and boost client grow.

"At Mediacom, we feel everything is connected," he said. "And that means a media agency has to think and operate in an entirely new way."

This isn't Mediacom's first appearance in Pakistan. Raihan Merchant, CEO of Brainchild Communications, operated Mediacom as an affiliate under the registered business name of Pak Media Communications since 1996, the same year Taher A. Khan formed Mindshare.

In 2010, when P&G and Coca-Cola globally left Mediacom for Starcom, Merchant discarded the WPP affiliate and purchased a Starcom affiliate as a means of retaining two of Pakistan's leading advertisers, operating the new affiliate under the new name of Brainchild Communications.

While most media agencies in Pakistan operate under an affiliate, GroupM Pakistan is the only one with ownership from WPP.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

9 hours ago

Budgets 2025: Retail media and CTV will dominate ...

The industry is poised for significant growth in 2025, fuelled by robust digital revenues and shifting consumer behaviours that could see budgets moving to social platforms and retail networks over traditional channels. Media experts weigh in.

9 hours ago

McDonald's Valentine's campaign may make you ...

Ad Nut refuses to be manipulated by commercials, but this V-Day spot from McDonald's Philippines, with its saccharine portrayal of enduring love, is surprisingly effective. Curse you, Golden Arches!

9 hours ago

The boys’ club still runs Australian advertising—and...

Déjà vu and disappointment: W+K Sydney's all-male team exposes the hollow promises of diversity in adland, writes Jet Swain, who calls for an end to "lip service."

9 hours ago

Samsung says there’s an AI companion for every ...

With the global launch of its Galaxy S25, Samsung and BBH Singapore want consumers to think about AI not as an intimidating piece of technology but as an omniscient wingman.