Emily Tan
Dec 5, 2012

Bates Asia and CHI & Partners form joint-venture network

GLOBAL - Bates Asia and CHI & Partners have joined forces to establish a new network that doubles the size of both agencies and spans 16 offices.

David Mayo (Left) and Johnny Hornby
David Mayo (Left) and Johnny Hornby

Bates Asia currently has 14 offices across Asia-Pacific, while CHI & Partners has offices in London and New York. The new network will be led globally by Johnny Hornby, a CHI & Partners co-founder. David Mayo, who left Ogilvy a month ago to helm Bates, will be CEO of "Bates CHI & Partners" in Asia. The London and New York offices will continue to operate under the CHI & Partners name. 

Established in 2001 by Simon Clemmow, Hornby and Charles Inge, CHI & Partners is an award-winning independent agency. Its client roster includes Burger King, Samsung, Lexus and Nestle. In 2007, WPP acquired a 49.9 per cent stake in the agency, with the remaining 50.1 per cent placed in an employee benefit trust owned by the founders. 

Bates was established in Hong Kong by Ted Bates in the early 1960s after acquiring a stake in Cathay Advertising from George Patterson. It was fully acquired by WPP in 2003 and merged with agency 141 to form Bates 141. Last year, the agency rebranded, dropping 141 from its name. 

In recent years, Bates' reputation as a creative force has eroded despite a large and profitable client portfolio, and as Mayo acknowledged in an interview with Campaign Asia-Pacific, "needs to have pride built back into it."

“The joint venture brings together Bates, the agency that invented the unique selling proposition back in the 1940s, with CHI, the creators of ‘the big idea’, its modern equivalent,” said Hornby. 

Following the merger, the new network's strategy is to offer "bespoke multi-disciplined teams" and to be "a nimbler, faster, more modern alternative to the big networks", he added. 

This proposition is in response to client demand, Mayo said. "Clients all over the world are increasingly leaning towards more bespoke solutions developed from a wider menu of talent and skills, which by definition don't all live in the same place any more. At the same time they demand geographical spread in order to reach multiple, connected audiences."

The new Bates CHI & Partners forms a global network with access to some of "the best tools and skills available", he concluded. 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

3 hours ago

The rational consumer: Why China’s shoppers are ...

A new mindset is reshaping the Chinese consumer—64% now prioritise emotional fulfilment over material goods. Live entertainment, wellness and self-improvement are taking precedence over luxury shopping. For brands, selling happiness now matters more than selling products.

4 hours ago

HSBC’s CMO on using Hong Kong as a backdrop to ...

To commemorate HSBC’s 160th birthday, Shum talks with Campaign about marketing efforts to mark the occasion, how the brand maintains relevancy, and utilising the fabric of Hong Kong in its marketing.

4 hours ago

Move and win roundup: Week of March 10, 2025

Dentsu, Orange Line, Sparro, and more, in our weekly collection of people moves and account news.

4 hours ago

The value of experience: Why adland must address ageism

The advertising industry's obsession with youth risks sidelining seasoned professionals, leading to a loss of intellectual capital crucial for long-term success, argues IPG Mediabrand's Geoff Clarke.