David Blecken
Mar 19, 2013

Dentsu appoints Ted Lim as chief creative officer for Asia

Newly created role part of plan to strengthen agency’s creative profile outside Japan

Lim joins Dentsu after a short stint at Leo Burnett
Lim joins Dentsu after a short stint at Leo Burnett

Lim, originally from Malaysia, will be based in Singapore and is due to begin his new role on 1 April. He joins Dentsu after a short stint (less than a year) as chief creative officer of Leo Burnett Singapore, but is best known for his work at Naga DDB in Malaysia, where he spent 20 years. At Dentsu Asia, he will oversee creative work across the ASEAN and Oceania regions.

The development marks the network’s first major regional hire since Dick van Motman came on board as Dentsu Asia’s chairman and chief executive in October. Van Motman noted that Dentsu had “embarked on an aggressive plan of expansion” over the past year and described Lim as “well known within the industry and with clients for being an outstanding creative mind”. Lim said he was excited to join Dentsu at a time when the agency was “undergoing a creative renaissance”.

Dentsu Asia has a low profile in terms of creative work relative to Dentsu in Japan. Van Motman said Lim was someone with a balance of business acumen, creative ability and cultural affinity who would be able to help "reinvent" the network.

"When I embarked on this exciting journey to untap the potential of the Dentsu brand, my first priority was to have a creative partner with me—someone that was about reinvention, bridging cultures, had a stellar track record and was someone you can spend day and night with," van Motman said. "[Lim] is that person."

Dentsu Asia recently opened for business in Myanmar with an office in Yangon.

The article first appeared on Campaign APAC

Source:
Campaign Asia

Follow us

Top news, insights and analysis every weekday

Sign up for Campaign Bulletins

Related Articles

Just Published

9 hours ago

Unraveling brand boycotts: What are the top ...

Shunning companies whose products pose health risks, such as containing toxic or cancer-causing substances, stands out as the primary motivation for consumers worldwide to cancel brands.

9 hours ago

WPP chief exec Mark Read targeted by deepfake scammers

Fraudsters used AI in Microsoft Teams meeting with the 'agency leader'.

9 hours ago

Picks of the week: Mother's Day campaigns 2024

From McDonald's to Mother Dairy, these are our top picks for the most heart-heartwarming and tear-jerking campaigns for mums in 2024.

13 hours ago

Why data is leading disruption in the communications...

Roshan Mohan of Pepper Communications asserts that the days of PR professionals adopting a one-size-fits-all approach in hopes of resonating with the masses are over. Today, survival in the industry hinges on leveraging data.