Kenny Lim
Jan 4, 2010

Ogilvy RedWorks names Robert Doswell as Asia-Pacific vice-president

SINGAPORE - Ogilvy & Mather has promoted Robert Doswell (pictured) and Colin Wan to vice-president for RedWorks Asia-Pacific and team director for RedCard Singapore respectively.

Ogilvy RedWorks names Robert Doswell as Asia-Pacific vice-president
After an eight-year stint with RedCard where he was managing director for Singapore, Doswell shifts to the regional role and will report to Michael Burgess, regional president, RedWorks Asia-Pacific.

Doswell said: "I am extremely excited to move into a new direction to take on this new regional challenge with RedWorks. Colin Wan is more than capable to lead RedCard – he works well with clients and possesses a smart and agile mind. I am confident that he is the right man to steer RedCard into its next phase of evolution."

Colin Wan, a two-year veteran with Ogilvy RedCard, will take over Doswell’s role. He was project director previously and will continue to lead key accounts in the agency such as Motorola, Getty Images and PSB.

Before joining RedCard, he was with OgilvyOne Singapore.

The moves will be made effective in February 2010.

Related Articles

Just Published

1 hour ago

Selfie-obsessed humans can now match with shelter dogs

Cheil Worldwide's latest campaign uses AI to match humans with shelter dogs based on looks and personality. Ad Nut is baffled and judging you.

2 hours ago

'The holding company model has been broken for a ...

EXCLUSIVE: Fresh off two major acquisitions in 2024, Jamie Posnanski unpacks why the traditional agency-supplier model needs an overhaul, combating transformation fatigue, and why so few clients believe their agency models are fit for purpose.

2 hours ago

Advertisers of the month in Malaysia: Watsons, ...

The three brands led advertising awareness gains in Malaysia during the month of January, with Watsons’ Chinese New Year campaign achieving the highest visibility.

2 hours ago

'Everyone Must Go' tagline for NZ Tourism slammed

Created to specifically encourage tourists from Australia, the campaign has been linked to everything from Kiwi immigration to infrastructure problems within New Zealand.