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<span id="hs_cos_wrapper_name" class="hs_cos_wrapper hs_cos_wrapper_meta_field hs_cos_wrapper_type_text" style="" data-hs-cos-general-type="meta_field" data-hs-cos-type="text" >Leon Communications taps Edington Advisors for editorial collaboration</span>

Leon Communications taps Edington Advisors for editorial collaboration

Leon Communications has announced a strategic partnership with Edington Advisors, combining Leon’s financial PR services with Edington Advisors’ editorial capabilities across private banking, wealth management, and global finance.

Under the partnership, Founder of Edington Advisors, Elliot Wilson (pictured right) will join Leon as Consulting Editor. He will work alongside the consultancy’s senior team to advise clients on thought leadership content, awards strategy, and senior executive profiling. Elliot was previously a Global Private Banking and Wealth Management Editor at Euromoney.

Leon Communications and Edington Advisors will also collaborate on joint client pitches and networking events across markets, including Singapore and Hong Kong.

Commenting on the partnership, Tim Williamson, Managing Director of Leon Communications, said, “Everything we do is built around helping clients communicate with substance, clarity and credibility. That matters particularly in financial and professional services, where clients need more than just visibility. They need strong ideas, well-structured arguments and content that stands up to scrutiny.”

“Elliot is one of the most respected editorial voices in wealth management and private banking. His experience adds real depth to the work we already do for clients across thought leadership, awards and strategic content. We’re delighted to bring that perspective into Leon and to work together on opportunities across the region.”

Elliot said, "Leon has the strategic relationships and communications capability across Asia Pacific. What I add through Edington Advisors is editorial rigour: including helping senior professionals find their public voice. I’m excited to be working with Tim and the Leon team.” 

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Study
Research

Study Highlight: News platforms losing ground to marketplaces and YouTube in AI search

Maverick Indonesia and GridOto have released a new whitepaper examining how AI search engines are changing the way they cite sources when answering automotive-related questions in Indonesia.

The report, News Platforms Losing Ground to Marketplace Platforms and YouTube, argues that AI search visibility is no longer shaped mainly by traditional news coverage. Instead, platforms that help consumers compare, evaluate and make purchase decisions, including automotive marketplaces and YouTube channels, are becoming more influential in AI-generated answers.

Key findings from the report
Marketplace platforms have overtaken news media as a major AI citation source. According to the report, marketplace became the most-cited category, rising from 25.8 per cent to 31.5 per cent, while news media declined from 32.8 per cent to 29.7 per cent. The findings suggest that AI engines are increasingly favouring transaction-oriented content, such as product listings, price ranges, comparisons and specifications, over broad editorial information.

Social media also recorded significant growth, largely driven by YouTube. The report found that YouTube is becoming a more prominent source in AI answers, particularly where videos provide structured answers to specific consumer questions. Long-form videos, comparison content and buying guides were more likely to be cited than short-form content.

The study also highlights a shift in who AI trusts on YouTube. Individual creators now account for nearly half of YouTube citations in the dataset, while YouTube channels owned by news media have declined. Maverick Indonesia and GridOto suggest this may be because individual creators often frame content from a user or buyer perspective, making it more relevant to consumer decision-making prompts.

News media still matters, but AI appears to be more selective in how it cites publishers. Only six of the top 20 news domains tracked in the report increased their citation share. Suara.com saw the strongest proportional increase, with most of its growth coming from ChatGPT.

The report also points to crawler access as an important, but not sufficient, factor in AI visibility. Media that allowed AI crawler access saw mixed results, while outlets that restricted access often recorded citation share declines. After GridOto opened access to AI crawlers in June 2025, its AI referral traffic showed an upward trend, with ChatGPT emerging as the main driver.

Why it matters for communications professionals
For PR and communications teams, the study suggests that AI search is becoming a reputation channel in its own right. Visibility is no longer only about search rankings, media coverage or owned websites. Brands need to understand which third-party sources AI engines trust and cite when consumers ask questions.

For automotive brands, this means marketplace listings, KOL reviews, YouTube explainers and structured news content can all influence how AI describes a brand or product. The report notes that brand-owned visibility is weakening, with official car brand pages and dealer sites both declining as citation sources.

For publishers, the findings point to the need for “AI-readable” editorial formats. Maverick Indonesia and GridOto recommend structured headlines, ranked lists, comparison tables, FAQs, evergreen explainers, updated buying guides and open crawler access to improve the likelihood of being cited by AI engines.

For communicators more broadly, the lesson is that generative search requires an ecosystem view. AI visibility should be tracked by source type, prompt, platform and competitor, rather than treated as a website or SEO metric alone. 

DDB
Industry update

DDB Group Philippines becomes GGC Group Asia

DDB Group Philippines has rebranded as GGC Group Asia following the retirement of the DDB brand globally by parent company Omnicom Group after its acquisition of Interpublic Group.

The agency group, which has operated as DDB's affiliate in the Philippines since 1992, will continue to operate independently while maintaining access to Omnicom's global marketing communications tools and resources as needed.

Chairman and CEO Gil G. Chua (pictured) said the rebrand marks a new chapter for the business while recognising its longstanding partnership with DDB Worldwide and Omnicom Group.

As part of the transition, DDB Philippines has been renamed Velocity+, DDB MNL becomes Alab MNL, and Tribal Worldwide Philippines will now operate as The Tribe. Other agencies within the group, including Optimax Communications, Agile Intelligence, Ripple8, Touch XDA, and Bent and Buzz, will retain their existing brands.

The rebrand also brings together several sister companies from the FCT Group under the GGC Group Asia umbrella, including FOSA, Caishen, Track Mnl, Xpress Move, Strawberry Jam, and PhilMovers.

According to the company, the group now comprises 14 companies across 18 locations nationwide with more than 7,500 employees. It added that the transition will not affect leadership, client relationships, talent, contracts, or ongoing operations. 

Lalamove
Moves

Lalamove names Public Relations Lead for Philippines office

Alliyah Villeza has joined Lalamove Philippines as Public Relations Lead, where she will lead public relations and corporate communications initiatives, including campaign development, media relations, agency management, partnership engagement, reputation management and issues monitoring.

She brings both in-house and agency experience from her previous roles at Meralco PowerGen and RedTorch Communications.