Campaign India Team
Mar 21, 2011

Alok Lall joins McCann Worldgroup as executive director

Will be in charge of the Delhi office and integrated thinking across brands

Alok Lall joins McCann Worldgroup as executive director

Alok Lall, former managing director of iris India, is set to join McCann Worldgroup as executive director. He will be in charge of running the Delhi operations. Additionally he will carry the responsibility of driving a broader integrated vision across brands.

Lall has played leadership roles in agencies like JWT And Saatchi in the past, and in his last venture, he is said to have single handedly established Iris International in India with its integrated marketing solutions.

On the appointment, Prasoon Joshi, executive chairman, McCann Worldgroup, said, “I am extremely happy to have Alok come aboard in a key role. He is dynamic and brings a solid and fresh perspective. In our changing media landscape, Alok’s drive towards new age media solutions will add immense value to our offering and expertise.”

Source:
Campaign India

Follow us

Top news, insights and analysis every weekday

Sign up for Campaign Bulletins

Related Articles

Just Published

3 hours ago

Apple to integrate ChatGPT into the next iPhone ...

Ahead of the annual Worldwide Developers Conference, Apple makes plans to integrate more AI-powered features into its devices.

3 hours ago

The Tesla trial: Can brands thrive without a ...

Tesla CEO Elon Musk reversed course from a traditional advertising push last month by scrapping a freshly formed marketing team. Can brands survive or even thrive without a marketing team?

4 hours ago

FCB India appoints Mayuresh Dubhashi as chief ...

Known for his cutting-edge campaigns combining new-age technologies with classic storytelling, Dubhashi will work closely with CEO Ashima Mehra at FCB.

6 hours ago

BMC threatens license revocation for Ego Media ...

The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation has issued a notice to the advertising firm, threatening license cancellation over the alleged illegal hoarding that killed 14 and injured over 70.