Anita Davis
Mar 2, 2010

Euro RSCG names Matthew Fanshawe as regional MD

ASIA-PACIFIC - Euro RSCG has promoted CEO of Southeast Asia Matthew Fanshawe (pictured) to the newly created role of managing director of Asia-Pacific.

Matthew Fanshawe  CEO of Southeast Asia Euro RSCG
Matthew Fanshawe CEO of Southeast Asia Euro RSCG
Fanshawe will be responsible for overseeing regional operations with a focus on new business development, creativity and network expansion. The appointment is effective immediately.

He will continue to be based in Singapore and report to the network’s Asia-Pacific CEO Olivier Pluquet.

Fanshawe has been with Euro RSCG for eight years in Asia, working across a range of roles including account head for Intel in Hong Kong, MD in Singapore and CEO of Southeast Asia. He has worked on key clients including Intel, Dell, Changi Airport, DBS, Carlsberg and Coca-Cola.

Prior to joining Euro RSCG, he worked in North America, Asia and Europe at agencies including FCB, Wunderman and Y&R.

“One of our real strengths is our truly integrated nature, both culturally and financially, with digital at the core,” Fanshawe said of his appointment. “Building on this offering across the region is a challenge that I am enthusiastic about; and helping to drive the creative momentum we’ve had in Southeast Asia throughout the rest of the region is an important focus for me.”

In 2010, Euro RSCG also moved to strengthen its digital capabilities. Earlier this year, the network named Andrew Knott to the newly created position of chief digital officer.

His appointment follows key digital wins for the agency, specifically being placed on Unilever’s first global digital agency roster and being named IBM's global digital agency-of-record.

Related Articles

Just Published

16 hours ago

TikTok ban looms: Meta and YouTube positioned to gain

With over 170 million users and seven million businesses bracing for impact, the looming ban is similar to TikTok’s struggles in APAC—from outright bans in India and Nepal to restrictions in Australia and New Zealand.

17 hours ago

One year on: Running an indie and the price of ...

"We were the same folks, the same award-winning team, just with a new name. But being indie was somehow synonymous with 'cheap' in the market. Seven lost pitches, six on price, it was a rude awakening," writes Moonfolks’ Anish Daryani.

18 hours ago

X escalates fight against advertisers

Less than a week before President-elect Trump takes office, X doubles down on legal war against advertisers with plans to expand its antitrust lawsuit.

19 hours ago

Spikes Asia 2025: Banana Balloon’s creatives on ...

Winning at Spikes in its first year of operation increased confidence and morale at China-based independent agency Banana Balloon.