Jenny Chan 陳詠欣
Aug 31, 2018

PHD retains Unilever business across Greater China region

Industry sees the account retention as a surprise given Mindshare's planning stronghold on the client globally.

Unilever
Unilever

PHD has retained the Unilever media planning and buying business across Greater China, Campaign Asia-Pacific has learned.

In a competitive pitch against WPP that has been running since the start of 2018, industry sources said the client became focused on digital capabilities in the later stages of the six-month pitch. The remit includes China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.

PHD already won the account in 2009, when the spend was reported at US$450 million then. Unilever has conducted a media review typically every three years, with the last renewal of the media-buying business with PHD taking place in 2015, reportedly without a pitch. The renewed account is now understood to be worth US$500 million.

Unilever's global comms-planning account was moved from PHD to Mindshare last year. In Greater China, PHD still does the planning.

Unilever did not respond to a request for comment in time for publication.

Source:
Campaign China

Related Articles

Just Published

4 hours ago

The changing face of political ad campaigns in India

From the era of booming TV ads to flooding social media in 2024, digital has completely reshaped the way in which political parties are approaching elections in India. Campaign speaks to industry experts to find out how and why.

12 hours ago

Move and win roundup: Week of May 6, 2024

PHD, TBWA, Clemenger BBDO, Houston and more, in our weekly collection of people moves and account news.

12 hours ago

Bilibili’s Youth Day video stirs plagiarism claims

Bilibili disputes the plagiarism claims on the video, which has already garnered over a million views on the platform.

12 hours ago

'Hire women: They do all the work and take none of ...

In a no-holds-barred conversation ahead of her headline appearance at Campaign 360 on May 14, adland veteran Gallop gets real about 'radical simplicity', women-led industry change, why the agency model is devaluing itself, and her sex-positive venture.