- born at st. vincents
- Charitable organizations.
- Photography Buff
- Has run 6 marathons
- Half Canadian
- College hockey player
- Film Festival.
Born at St. Vincent’s Hospital on W.12th St.
Serves a number of charitable organizations.
Photography Buff. Well, he has a camera.
Has run 6 marathons. Not consecutively.
Half Canadian. He prefers Canamerican.
College hockey player. Still plays the occasional pick-up game.
Annually attends the Toronto Film Festival.
Mark Denesuk Strategy & General Management
Mark is the kind of ad guy that most businesses only dream of having on their accounts. During his 20-year career, he has worked at some of the world’s largest agencies, delivering results for some of the biggest brands on the planet.
Read Mark’s full bio –>When the time came to launch his own agency, Mark left a position as Executive Vice President and Operating Board Member of McCann-Erickson New York — where he oversaw the Kohl’s Department Stores and Clearasil business. During his tenure at McCann-Erickson, he also served as General Manager of their four Southwest Region offices. Later, when McCann acquired Temerlin McClain, Mark served as the Dallas agency’s Chief Operating Officer — overseeing such accounts as Texas Instruments, i2 Technologies, La Quinta Inns and Suites, 7-Eleven, Federated Department Stores, SCI Corporation, Green Mountain Energy and Toshiba Computers.
Mark came to McCann-Erickson by way of Ogilvy & Mather, where he was a Senior Partner and Group
Management Supervisor for PepsiCo International and GTE (a predecessor of Verizon). He also served on the management team that opened O&M’s Dallas office.
Before he moved to Texas, Mark cut his teeth in New York at Grey, Young & Rubicam and Deutsch.
Mark and his wife, Pam, live in Dallas with their two children. He is actively involved in the community, and serves on the boards of the Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Dallas and the Thanksgiving Foundation. He has also worked on committees and advisory boards for the Dallas Symphony, the Junior League, March of Dimes and the Cattle Baron’s Ball and was a co-chair of the Texas Stampede.
