Staff Reporters
Oct 16, 2012

Ogilvy Sydney appoints GM as Carr moves to JWT

SYDNEY - Ogilvy & Mather Sydney has promoted business director Nathan Quiley to the post of general manager, replacing outgoing GM Richard Carr.

(L-R) Baxter, Bignell and Quailey
(L-R) Baxter, Bignell and Quailey

Carr left Ogilvy to helm WPP/STW-sister agency JWT in the newly created role of general manager. 

“Richard has been with Ogilvy for more than 10 years and has made a significant contribution to our business and staff development," commented Ogilvy Australia's CEO, Andrew Baxter, who added that he was pleased Carr had chosen to stay within the "family". 

Quailey, who started with Ogilvy in 1997, rejoined the agency two years ago. He will continue to work on the agency's major client, Vodafone.

In his new role, Quailey will be supported by fellow Ogilvy-veteran Leigh Bignell, who has been promoted to the newly created role of executive business director from her previous post of business director. Bignell will work with Nathan on the agency’s overall performance, while continuing to work across Nestlé, NSW Government, and Purina.

Baxter said that both Quailey and Bignell have had long and successful careers at the agency, with “a proven ability to develop and deliver successful creative solutions for a broad range of clients”.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

15 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Matthew Zeng, DSTNCT

Zeng co-founded DSTNCT and has propelled it into a top creative agency known for impactful public sector work.

16 hours ago

Nunn Media climbs to $42.8 million in wins, leading ...

Australian and New Zealand agencies make a mark in the global indie new-business league with over $120 million in wins.

18 hours ago

Agency of the Year 2024 winners: Japan/Korea

Check out the complete winner list for the Japan/Korea region in the 2024 Campaign Asia-Pacific Agency of the Year awards.

22 hours ago

Igniting the spark: A how-to-guide for finding ...

Here’s how one native designer brings her full self to her creative work — and how you can, too.