Staff Reporters
Jun 18, 2025

WPP Media changes regional structure across Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa

The new 'APMEA' model divides WPP's media business across six sub-regions and names new leadership roles.

WPP Media changes regional structure across Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa

WPP Media has adopted a new Asia Pacific, Middle East and Africa (APMEA) regional model as it seeks to further streamline its media business, formerly known as GroupM, under global CEO Brian Lesser. 

The move, effective immediately, will see the business divided into six sub-regions:

  • Australia and New Zealand led by Aimee Buchanan
  • China led by Rupert McPetrie
  • India and Sri Lanka led by Prasanth Kumar
  • Middle East and North Africa (MENA) led by Amer El Hajj
  • Northeast Asia (Japan, Korea, Hong Kong) led by Michael Beecroft
  • SEAPAT (Southeast Asia, Pakistan, South Africa, Taiwan) led by Helen McRae, in addition to her LVMH leadership across APAC.

The restructuring will also see new senior APMEA leadership appointments as well. Josh Gallagher becomes chief strategy and growth officer for APMEA, with the mandate of leading planning, new business and cross-WPP integration projects. Sindhuja Rai, meanwhile, is promoted from her APAC client leadership to chief client officer for APMEA, helming a client solutions team based in Singapore. 

Within WPP Media's new Media Management and Delivery organisation, formed by the integration of Nexus and Investment, as reported by Campaign in early May, there are also new leadership changes. 
Anita Munro, currently executive director of Thailand, will head Media Management while Arshan Saha will lead Media Delivery while continuing to lead the Singapore and Malaysia markets. 

The new APMEA leadership structure for Choreograph, is still yet to come. 

These moves are part of WPP Media's streamlining of operations under its new brand, involving the cessation of its media agency brands operating as separate business units, in favour of a single P&L. Restructuring-related job cuts have already been reported as staffing levels are affected throughout the region. 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

22 hours ago

Cannes Lions responds to criticism regarding ...

Dom Hyams, global client director at Purple Goat Agency, was unable to access the stage via the usual route.

22 hours ago

Asia-Pacific Power List 2025: Alvin Neo, Fairprice

With a foot in both tradition and transformation, Neo is reimagining what Singapore’s most beloved supermarket means to the next generation of shoppers.

22 hours ago

Thailand's Top 50 brands 2025

See why Lazada tops the list in Thailand and explore the rising challengers shaking up the rankings in Campaign’s regional research with Pureprofile.

23 hours ago

Why Chinese youth engage in 'emotional consumption'

These consumers are going beyond the usual value for money and are willing to pay a premium for the “emotional value” a purchase brings.