Showing posts with label topjobsinasia.com. Show all posts
Showing posts with label topjobsinasia.com. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 November 2010

Five things for grooming the next generation of leaders

Very good piece Ian. As a 6th to know, I would also include “Listening”. Finding from your identified future leader what motivates them. It’s not a cliché that everyone is unique. What motivates and inspires one, doesn’t necessarily have the same effect on the other. Asking them why they are working so well? What are they hoping to achieve? How they wish to be rewarded? How do they see themselves contributing to the agency, client, society? These can unveil some unexpected answers. And the reward that motivates them could be something you would have never have provided without “listening”.

Below are five key things Ian Thubron, group president of TBWA Greater China, has learned about effectively grooming the next generation of leaders over the past twenty years. Published in Campaign AsiaL


It’s an oft-used phrase that the assets of an integrated communications company go up and down in the elevator every day. After all, all we have is our people plus a rented office and some computers. Yet we spend very little time on 'people', and particularly, grooming the next generation of leaders – bonding them to us, making them ambassadors for our culture, incentivising them, and retaining them.
1. Let them know
There's absolutely no point in identifying potential leaders, working on short and long term incentive plans, and then not letting them know about it for fear of upsetting others. Future leaders are special, and they need to know they've been earmarked so they have the confidence to grow and succeed in the organisation.
2. Relevant learning
It's not just about being recognised and marked out. It's about being taught the skills and techniques they will need as they grow in the organisation. Don't flatter them – equip them with knowledge and skills. That's what they really need to succeed and, ultimately, what they're really looking for.
3. Impact
Much of the glamour has left our business, so make any incentive plan sexy. Anything involving travel usually works, or being able to interact with senior leadership of the network. In Shanghai, we utilised external resources – a leading historian, an art curator, a jazz musician. We sent the our people off to discover the 'real' Shanghai – visiting schools, homes, art galleries, a futurologist. These sorts of 'impact moments' got the highest evaluations.
4. Collective not individual
Growing future leaders within a company is most effective when it's about 'we' and not 'I'. Groom the next generation collectively so that you form a strong network of future leaders around the world, which will be a tool for them (and you) as they grow and develop. They will spontaneously form Facebook groups, pick up the phone, visit while traveling, and work together on pitches and projects. The power of the collective is greater for the future leader than an isolated programme focused only on the Individual.
5. Mentoring
While the big training programme, the trip to Cannes, the breakfast with the chairman, all have impact, it is equally important for future leaders to have regular interaction with senior mentors – 'on the job' schooling that helps him or her in a more informal and consistent way. All TBWA staff have senior management mentors in the network, and they find this to be an incredibly enriching aspect of their development.
'People' isn't a science, but it is vitally important – for the health of our agencies today, and our future health in the hands of those who will ultimately come after.

Friday, 12 November 2010

Digital trend watching in China!



Here is a site that was shared with me by a great digital creative talent in the market.
This blog site has a clear mission:
to log and share all happenings related directly/indirectly to digital trends in China.  

China is always changing and everyday there is a new idea or happening in the digital space.
Profero in China have a great intent.  What they want to do, is not just do work that is an extension on the current trends, but actually help their clients to make a mark, and actually send the trend digitally!


Enjoy the read:

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Pernod Ricard Japan picks Isobar as digital AOR for Chivas Regal

Consumer Centric Offering

Isobar Japan has scooped Chivas Regal’s digital agency-of-record contract following a pitch called in August which also involved incumbent Euro RSCG. 

Although the monitored digital spend for Chivas was only about US124,000 July 2009 to June 2010. I really think Isobar has an opportunity to "uplift the luxury, authentic and prestigious brand image of Chivas Regal in Japan."  It's a brand with over 200 years of history, so certainly going back to it's roots and providing some historical perspective in the digital campaign would do well to interest the Japanese consumer - who do love the "history" of a brand.  Tie that up with some good on-and off-trade activity, events and PR; and they can compete with the "whisky high-ball" boom we are now seeing in Japan.

Tuesday, 2 November 2010

TopJobsInAsia.com & AdvertisingJobsInAsia.com

I've been putting together a team of liked-minded people over the years, to help on projects and execute things that appeal to each other and are mutually beneficial.  A plan for 2011, is to construct a free* portal site for Job posting for both agency side and client side roles throughout Asia.  Considering the size of the market, I am hoping clients and candidates I know, may call on the site as another channel to help them find people and also for people to find their next career move.  I am not writing myself out of a job, but as one extra tool, I think it is something that will benefit all.

I actually own the domains:   TopJobsInAsia.com and AdvertisingJobsInAsia.com

A shamless request: If any of my "creative" friends out there would love to bang together a FUNKY logo for either or both, I would be fully appreciative and it would be the basis of the "look" of the site.  Ideas welcome! The more the merrier...

As always, you can contact me direct at   ty(at mark)asianetjapan.com





*until the traffic picks up and I need to cover higher costs - clients will pay a small fee for posting once i can jutify the cost/value.