Stagwell has announced its new APAC headquarters situated in Singapore's Solaris in one north precinct, which is set to open in early 2026. The campus will host Stagwell's Singapore agencies, including ADK, Allison, Assembly, Forsman & Bodenfors, HarrisX, Ink Global, and Locaria, alongside other brands in the network.
The new space is designed to bring together Stagwell's creative, communications, digital transformation, brand experience, media, and AI capabilities, promoting integrated teams, collaboration across disciplines, and facilitated agility.
"Singapore is the engine of our growth in Asia. The new Stagwell Singapore campus brings creativity, media, communications, data, and AI together so we can move faster for clients," said Randy Duax, Managing Director, Stagwell Asia-Pacific. "This is the new model. More connected, more inventive, and built for the momentum of local markets. Asia is where the future of this industry is being built, and Stagwell is building it."
Connie Chan, Chief Growth Officer, Stagwell APAC, added, "Our new home at Solaris @ one north reflects Stagwell's commitment to building for the future. It's a space designed for collaboration, creativity, and sustainability - so we can show up stronger for clients in Singapore and across APAC."
This announcement follows Stagwell's acquisition of ADK GLOBAL earlier in 2025, the expansion of the Future of News initiative to Singapore in October, the launch of Stagwell Media Platform, and its partnership with Palantir.
Stagwell's new APAC HQ, agencies consolidated into new campus
Telum Media creating connections
Get in touch to learn more
Example sets foot in the Middle East
You might also enjoy
Aaron Tan has joined FleishmanHillard as Auto Practice Lead and Account Director, bringing experience across branding, communications, marketing and digital strategy.
Based in Singapore, he has accumulated more than 15 years of experience, having previously held senior roles at agencies including The Ate Group and W Communications.
In 2025, artificial intelligence sits at the centre of growing global divides. Across economies and generations, engagement with AI is revealing widening gaps in trust, understanding, and opportunity.
Chinese AI trust landscape
The 2025 Edelman Trust Barometer Flash Poll: Trust and Artificial Intelligence at a Crossroads reveals that respondents in Mainland China demonstrates high trust in AI compared to developed markets, including the US, UK, Brazil and Germany.
87 per cent of Chinese respondents say they trust AI, a figure that increased by 9 per cent between November 2023 and October 2025. This compares with trust levels of 32 per cent in the US, 36 per cent in the UK, and 39 per cent in Germany.
Strong embrace of AI adoption
High trust in AI among Chinese respondents also translates into their everyday use. 60 per cent of Chinese employees use AI weekly or more, while 49 per cent say they embrace its growing use, compared with just 18 per cent who reject it.
Acceptance is particularly strong in sectors shaping future growth. 43 per cent of financial services workers and 55 per cent of technology sector employees report embracing AI in their work, highlighting how quickly the technology is becoming embedded in professional life.
Optimism over fear of disruption
Unlike Western markets, where AI is often framed as a threat, Chinese respondents remain broadly optimistic. At least 67 per cent believe generative AI will help rather than harm society, including in areas such as climate change, work life, mental health, social cohesion, and economic equity.
Fear of economic displacement is notably low. Only 26 per cent worry that people like them will be left behind by AI, the lowest level among all surveyed markets. Even among lower-income respondents, concern rises to just 36 per cent.
A broad ecosystem of trust
Mainland China’s confidence in AI extends across all categories of AI communicators. 87 per cent trust 'people like themselves' to speak truthfully about AI, 88 per cent trust friends and family, and 85 per cent trust coworkers.
Trust in institutions and authority figures is similarly high, including 87 per cent for scientists and AI researchers, 83 per cent for CEOs, and 84 per cent for journalists and technology influencers.
More than 70 per cent of respondents are comfortable with their employer's use of AI - the highest rate amongst countries surveyed, while 60 per cent are comfortable with the media's AI usage.
Trust issues outweigh other barriers
Despite high overall trust, some barriers to AI adoption exist in Mainland China. Among infrequent users, 43 per cent cite trust concerns such as data protection, 28 per cent worry about how data will be protected, and 19 per cent are concerned about how their data will be used. Issues of motivation and access affect 40 per cent, while discomfort with technology is cited by just 15 per cent.
However these barriers are significantly lower than in Western markets, where 55 to 70 per cent of infrequent users identify trust as the main obstacle to AI adoption.
Ultimately, the Edelman Flash Poll highlights a simple point: trust shapes adoption. Mainland China’s high public confidence supports faster and broader use of AI, while lower trust in Western markets aligns with a more cautious pace. These differences underline how public attitudes influence the trajectory of technological change across regions.
Alexa Cheah has joined W Kuala Lumpur as Marketing Communications Manager. In her new role, she manages the hotel’s brand and communications efforts, including media relations, corporate communications and reputation, events, social media, as well as beverage and food marketing, working alongside the Director of Marketing Communications.
Her prior experience includes roles at Grand Hyatt Kuala Lumpur, followed by Hyatt Hotels in Malaysia, where she contributed to brand campaigns, hotel openings, and cross-property initiatives in the cluster marketing team.