Benjamin Li
Sep 6, 2010

Wunderman relocates Michele Johnson as client services director in South Korea

SEOUL - In line with business growth around the region, Wunderman has transferred Michele Johnson from the agency's office in Germany to join the South Korea team.

Michele Johnson
Michele Johnson

Johnson (pictured) will be leading team Microsoft in South Korea as well as new business initiatives, while reporting to Stephane Faggianelli, president of Wunderman Asia, and partnering with Roke Yoo, digital planning director in the Seoul office.

Johnson has spent more than five years at Wunderman, based in Seattle, Germany and Beijing.

“Michele brings a strong international and network expertise to our team in Seoul, and will be a catalyst to develop even further our existing digital and data capabilities,” said Faggianelli who recently expanded his role to include 27 offices in 13 countries.

Before joining Wunderman, Michele spent over four years at Ogilvy Interactive in Frankfurt and Paris, working on B2B and consumer accounts including Amex and IBM EMEA accounts.

Earlier this year in April, Wunderman Beijing appointed Narelle Nicks as its MD.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

The anti-trend trend: How Starbucks aspires to use ...

THE CMO'S MO: Inspired by Apple, Starbucks Asia's marketing head, Samuel Fung, is blending tradition and innovation with a back-to-basics approach to build loyalty in a competitive market.

3 hours ago

STB partners with NBA to attract fans from the region

The Singapore Tourism Board seeks to make the city state an attractive destination for sport fans, as it looks further afield to boost its ambitious goals for inbound visitors.

3 hours ago

X partners with Magnite to boost programmatic ad sales

Magnite joins Google and PubMatic as official third-party sellers of X’s ad inventory which can help fill unsold inventory and attract more advertisers.

3 hours ago

Love looks different in Asia now, and so should ...

More people in Asia are choosing singlehood; it’s time brands moved beyond dated romantic tropes to catch up with times for V-Day marketing, argues this writer.