Gideon Spanier
Sep 14, 2018

WPP names Mel Edwards as Wunderman global boss

Move is new chief executive Mark Read's first significant appointment.

Mel Edwards
Mel Edwards

Mark Read has made his first significant appointment as WPP chief executive, promoting Mel Edwards to his previous role as global chief executive of Wunderman.

Edwards has been Wunderman's chief executive of Europe, the Middle East and Africa since 2015, when Read took over at the company. Edwards joined Wunderman as UK chief executive in 2012.

She will be in charge of 9,200 staff, looking after clients such as Shell, News Corporation and EY.

Edwards has been one of Read’s closest allies during a period when he transformed Wunderman, a traditional direct marketing agency that traces its roots back to 1958 in the US, into a digital agency that is "creatively inspired and data-driven".

She has played a leading role in making Wunderman more prominent in WPP’s offer to clients, notably when the parent company successfully defended the Shell creative account. Wunderman took the lead role instead of sister creative shop J Walter Thompson on the pitch this summer—a shift that Read highlighted to investors at WPP's recent half-year results.

Edwards has also been involved in M&A, including the internal merger of WPP agencies such as Possible and Salmon, and acquiring consultancy The Cocktail in Spain—potentially useful experience when Read is expected to merge more agencies in an attempt to simplify WPP.

She said Wunderman’s decision to expand its capabilities in areas such as commerce, consulting and customer relationship management means it is able to manage "the complete, end-to-end experience" for brands.

"What we could see clients wanting is more of a focus around the customer and that entire experience," Edwards said, looking back on how Wunderman has changed during her tenure and won clients such as BT and Samsung.

"If I look at who we were pitching against in 2012, it was more of a Proximity, a Havas, occasionally an OgilvyOne," she said, referring to other direct marketing outfits. "If I look now, it’s Sapient and consultancies like Accenture."

Edwards plans to "build on what Mark’s already achieved, which is a challenge after he’s done such a great job".

In a sign of the likely direction of travel, Wunderman bought a specialist Amazon-focused agency, 2Sales, in Luxembourg last week and is pushing its on-site agency model, Wunderman Inside, that puts staff in clients’ offices.

Read said: "Mel is an exceptional leader who demonstrated her ability to build the business by winning new clients and developing existing ones, attracting top talent and integrating technology into our offer.

"The agency has become a powerhouse in Europe and I have every confidence that it will continue its success globally with her leadership of an outstanding team around the world."

Edwards will be based in London but is expected to spend a lot of time in North America, Wunderman’s biggest market, as well as Latin America and Asia.

She began her career at charity agency Smith Bundy and creative shop GGT, before spending 12 years at M&C Saatchi’s CRM shop Lida.

 
Source:
Campaign UK

Related Articles

Just Published

9 hours ago

John Wren on his vision for a bigger, better Omnicom

The chief executive tells Campaign why the IPG acquisition makes sense, what the impact will be and what will determine success.

12 hours ago

Big ideas, not big algorithms, will win Cannes

At Cannes 2025, Adobe’s Shantanu Narayen and Publicis’ Arthur Sadoun unpacked why AI may power creativity—but humans still pilot it.

14 hours ago

Campaign Cannes Global Podcast Episode 2

Our editors from the UK, US, Canada and APAC report from Campaign House at Cannes Lions 2025.

14 hours ago

Agency Report Card 2024: Publicis Creative

Publicis Creative had a commanding year, with Leo Burnett cementing its place as APAC’s new creative powerhouse across major award shows. But as structural shifts continue to take shape, all eyes are on how this momentum carries forward.