Jenny Chan 陳詠欣
Apr 25, 2013

Carter Chow joins McCann Shanghai from Y&R; replaces Carol Lam

SHANGHAI - Carter Chow will be the new managing director of McCann Shanghai as he replaces Carol Lam, who bade farewell to the agency last August to head to Saatchi & Saatchi.

Carter Chow
Carter Chow

Chow will report to Jesse Lin, CEO of McCann Worldgroup Greater China, when he gets in the seat at McCann Shanghai on 2 May.

Chow's final day as Shanghai managing director at Young and Rubicam was last Friday, after a six-year stint since 2007. At his ex-agency, he focused on the Colgate-Palmolive account serviced by the dedicated WPP operating unit, Red Fuse Communications, that was set up in September last year. Red Fuse merges the account teams at Y&R, Wunderman, VML, MEC and GHG

It is understood a replacement for Chow has been lined up at Y&R, but cannot be announced at the present time (due to "internal bureaucracy", according to industry sources who prefer to remain anonymous).

Lin said Chow's knowledge of the business is across a wide range of traditional, digital and integrated communications, one of the main reasons why he was hired.

At McCann, he will work closely with clients such as L'Oréal, Bank of Communications, Sanlitun and Fujian Nanping Nanfu Battery as well as drive operational excellence between the agency's creative and account teams.

Born in Shanghai, Chow holds a MBA degree from the Marshall School of Business, University of Southern California.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

Agency holdcos face a new crossroads: reunite media ...

Iain Jacob predicted five years ago that buying tech and data, rather than renting it, would help agency “dinosaurs” modernize. Now, he says, merging media and creative will be a key differentiator in the AI era.

2 hours ago

Is Bluesky the new #MarketingTwitter? Marketers ...

X users are becoming ex-users and fleeing to the new social app founded by X’s co-founder.

2 days ago

Generation Greytt: The trillion-dollar market that ...

Armed with unprecedented pocket power and digital savvy, the over-50s are redefining what it means to age. Yet businesses remain fixated on youth, overlooking a demographic that's more adventurous, connected and ready to spend than ever before. Rajeev Lochan opines.