Thomas Yang, executive creative director and head of art at DDB Group Singapore, has left the agency after 16 years to join Leo Singapore in an undisclosed leadership role. The move arrives without public succession planning from DDB's Singapore leadership, suggesting the exit caught the network mid-cycle on talent retention.
Yang's tenure at DDB spanned Singapore's transition from print-heavy luxury campaigns to platform-native brand work. His portfolio included regional mandates for McDonald's, Volkswagen, and several Southeast Asian banking clients. DDB Singapore has not announced an internal promotion or external search to replace Yang's dual function as ECD and art lead, roles that typically require 8 to 14 weeks to fill at his seniority level in competitive Asian markets.
This is Leo's third notable creative hire from legacy holding-company agencies in Asia-Pacific since mid-2023. The pattern reflects Leo's post-merger integration strategy: acquire senior craft talent from Publicis and Omnicom shops to build regional pitch credibility while the Leo network digests the Mullen Lowe and VML merger layers beneath it. Yang's arrival gives Leo Singapore a creative lead with multinational client fluency and 16 years of institutional knowledge from a direct competitor. For chief marketing officers at global brands operating in Singapore, this means Leo can now field pitches with a senior team that has run the exact account types—banking, auto, QSR—those CMOs are reviewing agency rosters for in Q2 2025.
The risk for DDB Singapore is velocity. Losing a 16-year ECD without a named successor signals either a quiet strategic pivot away from art-driven creative leadership or a miscalculation on retention. Neither interpretation helps when defending incumbent accounts during annual reviews. Regional holding-company networks typically lose 12% to 18% of senior creative talent annually, but exits at the ECD level compress timelines for client reassurance and pitch scheduling.
Operators should monitor DDB Singapore's next creative hire and whether it comes from inside the Omnicom system or from independent shops, which would indicate broader strategic direction. Leo Singapore's formal announcement of Yang's role and title will clarify whether this is a lateral ECD move or an elevation to chief creative officer, which would confirm Leo's intent to compete for larger regional mandates. Both announcements should surface within 3 to 5 weeks.
Yang's start date at Leo has not been disclosed, but Singapore's standard 30-day notice period for senior roles suggests he will be in seat by late February or early March, positioning him for Q2 pitch season.