Susie Sell
Nov 12, 2012

Paul Gibbins to leave Mindshare Thailand after 10 years with agency

BANGKOK - Paul Gibbins is leaving Mindshare Thailand after 10 years with the agency to take on the role of MD for Mindshare Hong Kong.

Paul Gibbins
Paul Gibbins

Gibbins will begin his new role in Hong Kong in January. He will replace Melanie Lo, who was promoted to MD of GroupM Hong Kong earlier this year.

Nilufar Fowler will now take on the MD role for Mindshare Thailand.

Gibbins has been with Mindshare Thailand since 2002 and has led the agency’s operations in the market since 2010.

In his new role, he will be tasked with growing Mindshare’s talent as well as adapting its globally developed tools, data and technology platforms to the Hong Kong market in an effort to drive innovation, and create a more integrated and an RoI-focused approach.

Meanwhile, Fowler, who has been managing partner of Mindshare’s largest client (Unilever) in Thailand for the past two years, will take on the MD role at Mindshare Thailand.

She said the agency will continue to focus on driving innovation and technology for clients.

Ashutosh Srivastava, CEO, Mindshare Worldwide emerging markets, said, “Being able to fill both of these positions from within our own network is ... testament to the group’s talent strategy, especially in leadership development.”

 

 

Related Articles

Just Published

3 hours ago

Omnicom 'incredibly well prepared' for IPG merger; ...

In Q4, Omnicom spent $14.6 million on 'acquisition transaction costs' related to its impending merger with IPG.

14 hours ago

China cracks down on Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger ...

The announcement comes amid escalating US-China trade tensions, with Google and other US firms also under scrutiny.

14 hours ago

Assembly taps former Initiative CEO for Greater ...

EXCLUSIVE: Karen Ho joins the agency in a newly created role to drive growth in Greater China.

15 hours ago

Woolley Marketing: Walking the line between ...

Numerous holding companies, including WPP, Dentsu, and Publicis, are rebranding their agencies by shedding legacies. Darren Woolley asks would they advise clients to undertake similar transformations?