Benjamin Li
Jun 21, 2012

Mindshare China president Melvyn Goh resigns

SHANGHAI - Melvyn Goh, president of Mindshare China, has resigned and his final day is slated for September 2012.

Melvyn Goh
Melvyn Goh

Goh (pictured) has resigned due to personal reasons and has not revealed plans for his next career move.

The agency is now searching for a new president for Mindshare Greater China region.

In the interim, Linda Lin, vice-president of Mindshare China, and Karl Cluck, chief strategy officer of Mindshare China, will continue as co-presidents to oversee the management of Mindshare China, working directly with Bessie Lee, CEO of GroupM China, and Ashutosh Srivastava. chairman and CEO of Mindshare global emerging markets group.

Rumours about Goh’s resignation have been circulating for some time. When Campaign Asia-Pacific asked GroupM about the rumours in mid-June, a spokesperson reported that Goh was on sabbatical leave as he was feeling ‘burnt out’.

Goh took the president role at Mindshare in May 2010, where he was responsible for strategic and operational growth of the agency.

Prior to joining Mindshare, he was CEO of M Media Group, a media investment unit of Morningside Group, from 2005 to 2010.

Lee said, “on behalf of Mindshare and GroupM China, I wish Melvyn much success in his new endeavors.”

One former 4A agency boss commented that "Melvin has worked in media owner side. It is not easy to survive in agency as they have very different culture."

A recent similar departure of senior agency head with a non-agency background was Li Yifei, former chief strategic development officer for Publicis. Li was a senior advisor at GLG Partners before joining Vivaki China as country chair in 2009, but she resigned in November 2011 and has joined London-listed investment management firm, the Man Group.

Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

Google cuts 200 jobs in a core business unit

The redundancies are in a department responsible for sales and partnerships and part of a broader cost-cutting move as Google invests $75 billion in AI and data centres.

1 day ago

Why sports marketing should lean into intimate, ...

In a world shaped by Gen Z and hyper-local engagement, the winning brands aren’t the loudest—they’re the ones that create authentic experiences that foster belonging and build trust.

1 day ago

Is AI financially beneficial for agencies?

AI promises speed, efficiency—and fewer billable hours. So why are ad agencies investing millions in a tool that threatens their bottom line? Campaign Red digs into the tension between progress and profit.

1 day ago

How Want Want cracked Japan’s competitive confection...

Campaign speaks to Tony Chang of the iconic Taiwanese food brand to learn about the brand’s strategy in penetrating the Japanese market, and the challenges of localisation.