Staff Reporters
Apr 22, 2022

Wieden Kennedy makes three global leadership appointments

Kathryn Addo is global brand director on Nike, Rebecca Groff elevated to chief marketing officer, and Jacqueline Steele is chief growth officer.

L-R: Jacqueline Steele, Rebecca Groff and Kathryn Addo.
L-R: Jacqueline Steele, Rebecca Groff and Kathryn Addo.

Wieden Kennedy (W+K) has promoted three leaders to global network roles. Kathryn Addo has become global brand director on Nike, Rebecca Groff has been elevated to chief marketing officer, and Jacqueline Steele is now chief growth officer.

They will report to Neal Arthur and Karl Lieberman, leaders of the independent agency.

W+K previously promoted Neal Arthur to global chief operating officer and Karl Lieberman to global chief creative officer, and hired Jai Tedeschi, as global director of culture and operations.

Addo, who has been at W+K for 10 years and was previously group account director, is now part of the network leadership team. She will lead the agency’s foundational client Nike. Addo will oversee the business globally with her partners Alberto Ponte and Ryan O’Rourke. She most recently was based at W+K Amsterdam, where she ran the office’s biggest accounts—Nike, Instagram and Facebook/Meta.

Groff, a 13-year veteran of the agency, will oversee the W+K brand and its expansion into new markets. Prior to this, she served as global director of communications and PR for six years. She will continue to oversee internal and external communications across the agency’s eight global offices.

Finally, new chief growth officer Steele has been at the agency for 11 years. Previously, she served as the director of new business for W+K's New York office.

These appointments are part of the agency’s evolution, noted new CMO Groff. “We have been redefining what creative opportunity is— which includes expanding the definition of who we hire and what we do for brands,” she said in a media statement. “While this place is still very much rooted in the vision that the founders had at the beginning… there is a lot that is new and different, so a big part of the remit moving forward is making sure more people and brands know they can come to W+K and find their voice.”

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

5 hours ago

Ramadan 2025: How Indonesians plan to spend, save, ...

Despite economic jitters, nearly half of Indonesians plan to give more to charity this Ramadan, with mosques remaining the top destination for Zakat donations, according to YouGov.

6 hours ago

Canva makes design child's play in W+K Tokyo's latest

Got two minutes? W+K Tokyo wraps the simple truth—design can be easy—in a package of pure, heartwarming charm for Canva.

6 hours ago

Is Jung von Matt’s independence its secret to ...

The indie’s agency’s global and regional leaders sit down with Campaign to unpack their global-meets-local strategy, learnings from its various markets, and the magic of ‘speed’.

7 hours ago

Here’s a thought: Marketers can sell anything—except...

Despite effectiveness being so high on the agenda, why are marketers still failing to make their case to the C-suite? Gurdeep Puri delves into the industry’s most frustrating paradox.