Good account planners require both creativity and a sound business
sense. Media profiles 10 of the region's rising young stars. ..." 11 years in Albania, Sutisna can
lay claim to have interviewed Britney Spears, among other celebrities,
while working as a radio reporter with his own movie show. After
Kessels-Kramer in Amsterdam and Strawberry Frog, he joined Saatchi
& Saatchi in late 2005, where he works primarily on UOB, The Navy
and HP."
Budi Dwisantara Sutisna
Senior planner,
Saatchi & Saatchi Singapore
A Dutch-Indonesian who spent his first 11 years in Albania, Sutisna
can lay claim to have interviewed Britney Spears, among other
celebrities, while working as a radio reporter with his own movie show.
After Kessels-Kramer in Amsterdam and Strawberry Frog, he joined
Saatchi & Saatchi in late 2005, where he works primarily on UOB,
The Navy and HP.
A keen football fan -- his dream is to shoot a
documentary about the world's hottest local football derbies -- his
proudest moment so far has been a TVC made with MTV for jailed Burmese
pro-democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi.
Sutisna's secret for great planning
Make messages about a complex world entertaining and meaningful
Cherry Chan
Strategic planner,
BBH Asia-Pacific
Chan's close connection to Singapore's media scene -- she is the
driving force behind a female-only music collective, PopMyCherry, which
encourages girls to try out DJing and VJing -- enabled her to keep a
close eye on youth trends when she worked with youth specialist
research house The Filter Group.
She's retained her youth focus at
BBH, working on accounts such as Levi's and Axe. She also runs BBH's
cultural research unit Profusion, which aims to identify emerging
attitudes and behaviour, and their impact on contemporary culture. Her
personal goal is to set up a brand programme to help young people
achieve their wildest dreams.
Chan's secret for great planning
Never be on the outside looking in -- stay personally connected to your target consumers
Amrit Kekre
Area planning director,
Grey Worldwide Malaysia
Kekre's
move from servicing Unilever to planning three years into his
advertising career chimed with his underlying belief that advertising
is a fascinating business that is made or broken by its study of
people. "Planning is not a department: it's a discipline that everyone
in the agency, irrespective of their function, needs to practice," he
says. "The fact that planners do it by design is a matter of mere
allocation, focused resources and skills." Kekre recently left India,
where he worked with JWT, Ogilvy and Everest Brand Solutions, to move
to Malaysia, where he is now adding a pan-regional and international
perspective to his planning acumen.
Kekre's secret for great planning
Look at people as people first, consumers later
Kaori Yatsu
Strategic planner,
McCann Erickson Japan
Currently
on maternity leave with her second child, Yatsu still often takes
interviews from the press and writes articles on McCann Japan's Real
Mothers project, for which she has become a recognised authority.
Part
of the reason she became a planner was her desire to become an expert
in how and why people change with the circumstances of society, and her
involvement with the Real Mothers project has allowed her to realise
that goal. When Yatsu returns from maternity leave, she will head a
special consultancy service for McCann clients focused on marketing to
today's mothers.
Yatsu's secret for great planning
Being a housewife, a mother and a planner
Navonil Chatterjee
Account planning director,
JWT India
This
rising star within JWT India showed what he was capable of in JWT's
hard-fought and successful shootout against Ogilvy for a Nike India new
business pitch, where he was at his creative, passionate and
enthusiastic best.
A former suit, Chatterjee realised his ambition
to become a planner when a vacancy opened up in the account planning
department in 2004.
Two years later, he has proven his worth as a
key driver of new business initiatives and handling cult brands such as
Nike and Levi's. His ultimate goal, however, is to work at a global
level, devising brand strategy for any of JWT's global brands and
playing an integral role in a global new business pitch.
Chatterjee's secret for great planning
Always seek to inspire
Siaw Meili
Strategic planner,
Rapp Collins Malaysia
Siaw's
shift from creative to planning was triggered by a training session
that roped in business heads from the Naga DDB group. By the time the
training culminated in a full-blown pitch exercise and presentation to
top management, she was hooked on what she describes as "that thrilling
alchemy of moving from key insights to brilliant communication ideas --
what an awesome marriage of art and science".
The contagious
enthusiasm of Naga DDB's strategic planning director Sulin Lau sealed
the deal, and Siaw's transfer request was accepted. Since then, DDB's
hunger for new business has given her the opportunity to work on luxury
cars and frequent flyer programmes.
Siaw's secret for great planning
Massive amounts of curiosity
Fredrik Sarnblad
Regional creative planner,
Y&R Brands
This
young Swede can claim a colourful past before his fascination for
psychology steered him into planning, with a career that has included a
year in jail (as a guard), acting in a Chinese soap opera (as an
American rocket scientist) and helping set up a Swedish telco in Hong
Kong. "I don't think you become a planner overnight simply because you
get a planning job," he says. "For me, I think I kind of naturally and
irreversibly evolved to become one."
After co-founding brand
planning shop Monkey Spank in Singapore, Sarnblad moved to Y&R in
2005, where he now holds a regional role working on Tiger Beer, Chevron
Lubricants and Cerebos Brands, as well as supporting Y&R's network
of local offices.
Sarnblad's secret for great planning
Works best when the rules are discarded
Lois Huh
Senior account planner,
Lee & DDB Korea
Huh
started working at Lee & DDB in 2000 and has been there ever since,
her first and only employer. She works on a range of clients, including
Johnson & Johnson, Philips, and Volkswagen. Her defining moments so
far have been helping develop key insights for Zic QX, a synthetic
engine oil, and Korea's premier lingerie brand SY Wacoal -- insights
which proved instrumental in driving sales for both brands.
"As a
marketing student, I was always keen to see how brands were built by
marketing strategy and what the brand meant to people's lives," she
says. "As a planner, I want to build brands that are meaningful to
people and that enrich their lives."
Huh's secret for great planning
Be simple, be open, and always listen hard
Marcus Sigurdsson
Planning director,
DraftFCB Greater China
After
a brief flirtation with Gartner, where, as an analyst, he was involved
more with technology and less with strategy and trends, Sigurdsson
returned to his first love, account planning. After getting back up to
speed with the latest developments, he joined DraftFCB. A fond memory
is a shared car journey to the airport with a potential client that
resulted in the client calling his team to implement Sigurdsson's
suggestions there and then. "It's a great feeling when your strategy
and their tactics match their needs and it all starts to happen in
front of your eyes."
Sigurdsson's secret for great planning
Great insights come from an indepth understanding of your client, their competition and their consumers
(Source: Media)
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