Staff Reporters
Nov 4, 2010

Ogilvy & Mather, PHD top the leagues in September

The Business Performance Leagues are compiled on a monthly basis by Campaign Asia-Pacific magazine. Business performance is measured according to the annualised billings value of accounts won and accounts lost.

Ogilvy & Mather, PHD top the leagues in September
Creative Performance League September
Rank Agency Wins Billings
gained
(US$m)
Billings
lost
(US$m)
YTD
totals
(US$m)
1 Ogilvy & 
Mather
Ministry of Energy, Thailand; Subway, China 11.6 3.1 239.9
2 DDB
- - - 181
3  Grey Group

Reliance Communications, India; KFC Singapore

62.4 - 172.5
4 Leo Burnett Tata International, India; Chevrolet (CRM), Thailand 28.2 0.4 162.1
5 TBWA
National Australia Bank, Australia; Sun Life, Hong Kong 120.8 3.5 159.9
6 McCann Worldgroup Tata Motors, India; Big CBS, India 16.3 5 100.1
7 Euro RSCG
MAXX Mobile, India; AMD, SEA Regional 9.2 - 97.3
8 Publicis Burger King, Singapore; Siemens Energy; Thailand 97.9 6.6 91.3
9 Y&R
- - - 77.3
10 Bates 141 - - - 46.3

 

Media Performance League September
Rank Agency Wins Billings
gained
(US$m)
Billings
lost
(US$m)
YTD
totals
(US$m)
1 PHD Pepsi, Australia; Guthy Renker, Australia 32.6 - 577.5
2 Carat Sony, Taiwan; Kraft, Australia 39.6 - 444.7
3 MEC
Reliance Communications, India; Blackrock, Hong Kong 65 3.4 389.1
4 MediaCom AB In-Bev, China; Blackmores, Australia 206.8 10.1 235.6
5 Starcom
Holden, Australia 38 1.8 233.9
6 Maxus
Infofood, Indonesia; ANZ Singapore 1 - 152.9
7 Zenith Optimedia
- - - 115
8 UM Coca-Cola, India; Ministry of Home Affairs, Singapore 65.5 - 105.6
9 MPG - - - 66
10 Dentsu Media - - - 61.1

METHODOLOGY: The Business Performance Leagues are compiled, but not audited, by Campaign Asia-Pacific magazine with the assistance of PricewaterhouseCoopers Hong Kong on a monthly basis and are based on aggregated billings data submitted by the agencies. Business performance is measured according to the annualised billings value of accounts won and lost. Agencies are ranked according to their net billings gain in the year to date.

It is assumed that the annualised billings data submitted by the agencies is complete, accurate and valid as per the agreed methodology and no audit is performed on this information. The methodology is that, for accounts that do not have a billings figure attached to them, a billings score is calculated as fees multiplied by 6.5 (a standard industry multiplier). Where billings data is submitted in ranges, the mid-point is selected for compiling the leagues. Retained business is not included.

Where possible, information submitted by agencies is validated for accuracy on a sample basis against the advertising spend data compiled by Nielsen Media Research, TAMIndia and NDT Japan.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

Women to Watch 2024: Paula Chiang, iProspect

Chiang’s leadership, performance-agility mindset, and mentorship has made iProspect an industry champion in driving brand growth while pioneering the implementation of AI-driven solutions for clients and young talent.

2 hours ago

Forsman & Bodenfors expands earned-first model as ...

EXCLUSIVE: After more than three years leading Forsman & Bodenfors Singapore, Po Kay Lee’s elevation to Asia president comes amid a series of regional wins—and signals a push to reorient the agency’s creative process around ideas, not just media spend.

3 hours ago

Google uses AI to block harmful ads—but inconsistenc...

Google’s 2024 Ads Safety Report outlines how AI is being used to identify and prevent ad policy violations at scale. While enforcement activity has increased, persistent gaps and inconsistencies exist across markets.

3 hours ago

Inside the collapse of Indonesia’s most promising ...

EXCLUSIVE: Thirteen years after its launch as a bold new model for independent agencies, Indonesia’s Fantastis Anak Bangsa (FAB) has collapsed amid allegations of financial misconduct, leaving a trail of unpaid taxes, shuttered agencies, and missing leadership.