Marie Green
Sep 20, 2010

Naked Communications and Bellamy Hayden merge in Australia

AUSTRALIA - Naked Communications has merged with Bellamy Hayden in Australia to help grow Naked's expansion into Southeast Asia.

Naked co-founder Adam Ferrier.
Naked co-founder Adam Ferrier.

Bellamy Hayden will relocate its staff to Naked's Surry Hills and Prahan offices at the start of October.

The merger sees the head count rise to 60 people under a three-man regional management team consisting of Bellamy Hayden founder Phil Hayden and Naked co-founders Mike Wilson and Adam Ferrier (pictured). The enlarged Naked Communications will also incorporate all existing services including brand and communication planning.

"Bellamy Hayden and Naked have similar offerings in and differentiations from the market, and highly successful track records," said Hayden. "We felt combining made it possible to accelerate our respective growth plans and provide any client looking for a strategically driven offer with the best resource in the market. Naked is the only agency in the world I would consider joining with in this way and could not pass up the chance to partner with proven talents like Mike and Adam."

According to a company release, the agencies merged in New Zealand at the start of August and has plans to open an office in Singapore.

Their combined client portfolio includes heavyweights like Coca-Cola, Unilever, Sony and Glaxosmithkline.

Related Articles

Just Published

20 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Su Ling Chan, MBCS

Chan’s success reaches beyond the boardroom, blending the discipline of an athlete with the strategy of a leader to excel in every arena.

20 hours ago

Spikes Asia 2025: Behind Leo Burnett Taiwan’s ...

Inspired by an organ donor’s story, Leo Burnett Taiwan united their creative and client teams to launch a campaign that broke cultural barriers and won international acclaim.

20 hours ago

Sony Electronics, Singapore govt bodies initiate ...

PITCH UPDATE: Sony Electronics Singapore is looking for a PR agency while Singapore government ministries and boards are on the hunt for various comms and creative services.