Staff Reporters
Sep 19, 2014

Calling entries for Agency | Marketer Partnership Award

ASIA-PACIFIC - Campaign Asia-Pacific, in association with Roth Observatory, is delighted to announce the launch of the Agency | Marketer Partnership Award to recognise Asia-Pacific’s most effective client-agency relationships.

The entry deadline is 8 October
The entry deadline is 8 October

Strong client and agency relationships are fundamental to getting the best levels of creativity, insight and intelligence into a brands strategy. This award will showcase the global and regional partnerships that have delivered outstanding work and sustainable ROI over time, bringing to the forefront the importance and value of solid client-agency relationships.

Entrants must have had an established relationship of at least 2 years or longer between an individual brand and an individual agency, and has to be in existence for at least part of the stated entry eligibility period, 1 November, 2013 to 15 October, 2014.

Download the entry kit and entry template now to enter.

The early entry deadline is 18.00 Hong Kong/Singapore time, 8 October 2014.

Good luck with your entries!

For further information, please contact Vic Ho at [email protected] or call (+65) 6579 0553.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

32 minutes ago

X drops Unilever from advertising boycott lawsuit

New ad partnership leads to worries about powerful companies giving into Elon Musk’s ‘bullying’ tactics under pressure and potentially setting a troubling precedent.

1 hour ago

40 Under 40 2024: Adrian Tso, DDB Group

As a strategy leader, Tso drives long-term, big-picture thinking; inspires his team with passion and energy; and has transformed the working culture of the agency over nine years.

3 hours ago

Kellogg's owner appoints European media agency

Scope will cover 28 markets including the UK, Italy, France, Spain and Germany.

3 hours ago

Go-to-market strategy: The art of stating the ...

Coca-Cola and Sonos both showed how things can go wrong for big brands when they want to act like startups, says Éric Blais in his latest Free to Disagree column.