JWT NAMES SEAN BOYLE AS NEW GLOBAL PLANNING DIRECTOR

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SEAN-BOYLE.jpgTy Montague and Rosemarie Ryan, Co-Presidents of JWT New York, have announced Sean Boyle, 40, as the agency’s new Global Planning Director overseeing all of the JWT global networks’ planning.

“We are really excited that Sean will be joining us,” said Montague.  “He has a top drawer pedigree with a vast bank of client and brand experience. Plus, he’s a great Irish story teller.”  

Boyle joins JWT from Saatchi & Saatchi, Asia where he was Regional Director of Creative Strategy and Planning for the last five years based in China and Thailand.  He previously worked as Planning Director of both SRVT-BAM and Principals in Sydney and in Singapore as Planning Director at BateyAds.

With a career that spans 22 years and two sides of the globe, Boyle has worked with key accounts such as Ford, Guinness, Unilever, Nestle, Procter & Gamble, Singapore Airlines, Sony and Mercedes Benz. He began his career in 1987 at O&M, Dublin and was a Board Director of CDP & Associates from 1990-1996.

Boyle is a regular columnist with many trade publications around the world, has lectured and trained advertising students through Award School in Australia and has won creative advertising awards as a writer.  He has also produced a feature film – The Long Lunch – which was released in 2003.

In an email to CB, Boyle pulls no punches explaining his move to New York: “I’d kinda hit a wall with Saatchi & Saatchi and my perspectives on where planning needed to go, differed wildly from the senior management of that company. This is a shame cos Saatchis is a great brand and I was sad to leave it. I’ll particularly miss the special partnership (and friendship) I had struck up with Creative Director, Andy Greenaway.  I then had a kinda aborted couple of months back in Sydney where I found the industry had regressed spectacularly over the five years I was overseas.  Sydney agencies continue to be ruled by rank conservatism… fear… disturbing politics, idiot accountants and a wanky creative clique that needs to be broken up quickly. I have no idea where the concept that an unchallenged client is a happy client actually came from but it seems to be the mantra preached by most CEOs and Senior Account Directors in the majority of ad agencies in the country.  There is too much research…particularly pretesting…and not enough intuitive bravery.  The agencies that we used to look to for forward thinking and subversion have all been bought up and sold out. The only glimmer of hope to me is that Droga 5 do something…tough, but not impossible. They are certainly the first Sydney agency I’d talk to if I suddenly turned into a client in the morning! Still, as an underdog Irishman, it’s fantastic to see the Kiwis kicking Aussie ass when it comes to great thinking and great creativity!

“And so to New York. I’d been putting off working in London and New York for a long time. Probably cos I was scared. Unsure as to whether I was capable of doing the job. JWT have, in Worldwide Planning Director, Guy Murphy, one of the most inspiring and respected planners in the world at the helm.  I had also worked with Craig Davis in my time at Saatchi and between the two of them they convinced me that JWT really was changing.  Of course one only has to enter the building here in New York to see that this is the case.  Rosemarie Ryan and Ty Montague are equally charismatic leaders who have totally turned this office around.  It looks, feels and acts like an ad agency that knows…really knows…that this business is all about producing great work. I am very excited at this new opportunity…especially as I just turned 40 and the only other realistic option was to get my belly-button pierced and buy a Lamborghini!”