Jane Leung
Jul 12, 2010

Seoul G20 Business Summit appoints Fleishman-Hillard

SEOUL - Fleishman-Hillard (FH) has been appointed as the communications partner for the Seoul G20 Business Summit after two rounds of bidding.

The Seoul G20 Business Summit
The Seoul G20 Business Summit

FH will provide strategy communication developments, visual identity, CEO support, global media relations and on-site press management, including CEO interview access and coordination.

"The Seoul G20 Business Summit is the first forum for over 100 global CEOs to share their wisdom and experience with the heads of The G20 Seoul Summit," said Yvonne Park, general manager of FH Korea.

The Business Summit is a sideline event at the Seoul G20 Summit. The event will be held from 10 to 11 November in Seoul. The major focus of this event is to present topics in trade, investment, finance and green growth.

In May, Cheil Worldwide was appointed to the communication business for the main Seoul G20 Summit. This global event is reported to have invited Korea-mega star Rain as the ambassador, along with 26 other stars to represents the entertainment, sports and arts industries.

 

Related Articles

Just Published

2 days ago

Asia-Pacific Power List 2024: Robin Liu, Miniso

Through strategic co-branding and localisation, Liu is steering Miniso towards global super-brand status with innovative marketing strategies and leveraging relevant IP.

2 days ago

Creative Minds: Koji Kanzaki on turning childhood ...

From aspiring comedian to comic fan and now creative director, Dentsu China’s ECD Koji Kanzaki loves uncovering beauty in the mundane, dreams of dining with Banksy, and keeps his inner child alive.

2 days ago

Wieden+Kennedy retreats from India, shuttering its ...

The agency's leadership in India including Ayesha Ghosh, Santosh Padhi and Shreekant Srinivasan have resigned.

2 days ago

Exit player zero: A creative director’s brush with ...

When a dream role at a gaming startup pulled in Robert Gaxiola, the veteran creative director and Playbook XP managing partner, quickly realised the cost to play was far too steep. Now, he’s urging fellow creatives to be wary of the same traps.