David Blecken
Jun 28, 2019

Tokyo-based Eat Creative becomes part of Fusion Group

Based in Melbourne, Fusion is looking to grow in Japan and Asia-Pacific.

L to R: Steve Martin, Ayako Chujo, Simon Norman
L to R: Steve Martin, Ayako Chujo, Simon Norman

Fusion Group, an Australian marketing services company headquartered in Melbourne, has taken a majority stake in Eat Creative, an independent agency with a presence in Tokyo and Hong Kong.

Both Fusion and Eat are looking to grow their business in Asia-Pacific. Fusion consists of 10 agencies and has a focus on retail. It also offers strategic and creative services. Eat was founded in 2000 by Steve Martin, Alison Jambert and Ayako Chujo. It works with a combination of local and international brands.

Eat’s clients include the building and homewares company Lixil, Peninsula Hotels, Bloomberg, Norweigian Cruise Line and Almac Group. Fusion works with Nike, Adidas, Mars and L’Oréal.  

Eat’s directors will retain their existing roles and assume leadership roles at Fusion, where they will report to Simon Norman, chief executive.

Alison Jambert and Simon Norman

Martin said he expected the move to enable Eat to take on larger-scale, longer-term work. “One of the challenges as a small independent is that bigger companies are interested in what we have to say and do but won’t commit because of the size” he said. “Being part of a larger group with the ability to provide delivery and logistics across Asia-Pacific is going to be attractive to people and mean we are more established, with a broader footprint.”

He added that Fusion would benefit from Eat’s experience of the Japanese market, which is known to be challenging. “What we have to do is maintain the independence that allows us to have local knowledge on the ground and allows the resources of Fusion to fit this market.”

He said it would be a learning experience for both sides. “What we’re hoping is that it’s going to allow us to work at a higher level within organisations, and use more of our skills to do more for those clients.”

Source:
Campaign Japan

Related Articles

Just Published

3 hours ago

Budgets 2025: Retail media and CTV will dominate ...

The industry is poised for significant growth in 2025, fuelled by robust digital revenues and shifting consumer behaviours that could see budgets moving to social platforms and retail networks over traditional channels. Media experts weigh in.

3 hours ago

McDonald's Valentine's campaign may make you ...

Ad Nut refuses to be manipulated by commercials, but this V-Day spot from McDonald's Philippines, with its saccharine portrayal of enduring love, is surprisingly effective. Curse you, Golden Arches!

3 hours ago

The boys’ club still runs Australian advertising—and...

Déjà vu and disappointment: W+K Sydney's all-male team exposes the hollow promises of diversity in adland, writes Jet Swain, who calls for an end to "lip service."

3 hours ago

Samsung says there’s an AI companion for every ...

With the global launch of its Galaxy S25, Samsung and BBH Singapore want consumers to think about AI not as an intimidating piece of technology but as an omniscient wingman.