Staff Reporters
Oct 5, 2023

Haymarket celebrates 25 years in Asia with founder Lord Michael Heseltine in Hong Kong

Commemorating 25 years of Haymarket Media Group in the Asia-Pacific region, the occasion was marked by a number of special guests and led by Lord Michael Heseltine.

Haymarket Media Asia Group commemorated its 25th anniversary on Wednesday evening, with founder and British politician Lord Michael Heseltine in attendance, along with Haymarket's global CEO Kevin Costello, and Haymarket director of People and Communications, Celia MacMillan. The celebration was hosted at the prestigous China Club in Central Hong Kong, which Lord Heseltine himself opened decades ago.

Speaking at the occasion, Lord Heseltine remarked the anniversary made him "emotional", and spoke of the evolution of Hong Kong as a sophisticated economy embracing change, and shared his excitement at seeing the achievements and future of the company as it continues to grow. 

The cocktail and canapés evening was also graced by a number of special guests including British consul-general to Hong Kong and Macao, Brian Davidson CMG, as well as a number of C-suite leaders from global agencies, financial institutions and prominent media titles Asia-wide. 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 hour ago

Omnicom cut 3,000 roles during 2024 ahead of IPG ...

Total headcount fell 1,000, as job reductions more than offset acquisition of 2000-strong Flywheel, and agency group plans further staff cuts to save US$330 million.

2 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Tala Booker, Via

What does it take to build a global communications agency in a year? Ask Tala Booker, the former HSBC executive who's rewriting the rules.

3 hours ago

Majority of marketers are unprepared to combat ...

A report from Forrester highlights the risks that companies face from deepfakes, as well as the current inadequate state of preparation to combat the problem.

4 hours ago

The unbearable cost of truth

As information retreats behind paywalls and attention splinters into subscription tiers, advertising faces its terminal paradox: We've made truth so expensive that soon, no one will be left who can afford to buy what we're selling.