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Omnicom Media Group NA Taps Katie Klein as Chief Investment Officer

20 December 2024 at 09:13
Omnicom Media Group (OMG) is bringing on PHD exec Katie Klein as chief investment officer, it shared with ADWEEK. Klein previously held the same role at subsidiary PHD USA. In her three years there, she built an integrated investment arm serving clients including Burger King, Delta Airlines, Diageo, Priceline, Uber, and Volkswagen Group. Prior to...

How Publicis Won The Data Wars, and What Omnicom-IPG Must Do To Have A Shot

20 December 2024 at 08:52
The data unit Epsilon has emerged as one of Publicis Groupe's biggest weapons of its recent success, helping its stock soar nearly 70% since the beginning of 2023. "Epsilon and Publicis Media operation are now totally intertwined and at the heart of our connected media ecosystem," CEO Arthur Sadoun told investors in its Q3 earnings...

Report: Omnicom-IPG Deal Probed by Congress Over Ties to GARM

19 December 2024 at 07:04
When Omnicom announced its takeover of Interpublic Group (IPG) on Dec. 9, its leadership was clear that the deal was pending regulatory approval. Ten days later, the deal is facing its first probe from Congressional representative Jim Jordan, who is investigating the two holding companies' ties to two organizations he views as anti-conservative. On Wednesday,...

WPP CEO Mark Read Tells Staff Omnicom-IPG Deal Is β€˜Good News For Us’

16 December 2024 at 05:59
WPP boss Mark Read has described Omnicom Group's acquisition of Interpublic Group (IPG) as a "moment of opportunity" for the U.K.-based ad network, urging employees to keep delivering for clients "without distractions." "Clients will not have missed the fact that, in the last week or two, several of our competitors have spent a lot of...

Strange Bedfellows: How IPG and Omnicom Should Navigate Active Pitches

13 December 2024 at 06:17
At any given time, agency holding companies have multiple pitches of different scale in play--and more often than not, they're pitching against each other. As Omnicom moves to acquire Interpublic Group (IPG), the two are undoubtedly facing off in various ongoing media and creative reviews--in which case, do they precede as enemies or friends? It...

Healthcare Marketing Emerges as Key Growth Driver in Omnicom’s IPG Deal

13 December 2024 at 05:23
In the history-making alliance that would meld two of the world's largest ad holding companies, Omnicom Group's takeover of Interpublic Group (IPG) brings under one roof more than 50 medical marketing agencies. Discussing the multibillion-dollar deal, Omnicom CEO John Wren singled out the healthcare marketing category as a potential major growth driver for the combined...

How Omnicom and IPG’s Data Assets Could Supercharge Its Creator Marketing Capabilities

12 December 2024 at 11:25
Omnicom's acquisition of Interpublic Group could shake up the creator industry. The potential deal would consolidate resources, data, and technology across the holding companies, giving clients access to more comprehensive influencer marketing strategies and tools. With more access to first-party data and combined relationships with influencer technology platforms, clients of the new Omnicom could see...

IPG Mediabrands To Lay Off 103 Staffers

12 December 2024 at 10:29
IPG Mediabrands plans to lay off 103 people on Jan. 2., according to a WARN notice filed in the state of California. The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act requires companies with 100 or more employees to provide notifications of facility closures or mass layoffs 60 calendar days in advance. IPG Mediabrands filed the WARN...

The Holding Companies Have Lost Their High Groundβ€”Here Are Some Reasons Why

12 December 2024 at 08:12
As much as the story has generated a lot of buzz, I find the news of Omnicom's acquisition of IPG to be unsurprising and part of the natural order. I am sad for the great agency legacies that will be mothballed. I am sad for the jobs that will be cut. I am sad that...

Don’t Get Used to Being β€˜Top Dog’ Post Omnicom-IPG Deal, Arthur Sadoun Tells Publicis Staff

12 December 2024 at 05:00
Publicis Groupe chief executive (CEO) Arthur Sadoun has addressed Omnicom Group's acquisition of Interpublic Group (IPG) in a video memo circulated to its 107,000-plus employees. In his speech, Sadoun cautioned staff not to get too comfortable being the world's biggest holding group by revenues and predicted the deal would be "positive for the industry at...

Omnicom-IPG’s Strong AI Front Could Protect Against a Big Tech Takeover

11 December 2024 at 11:54
On December 13, 1996, Miller Beer pulled all its business out of Leo Burnett, literally overnight. Officially, it was about lackluster sales, but rumors abounded that Miller discovered a subsidiary of Burnett had taken a small project from Anheuser-Busch, and Miller was livid. Now that holding companies own a huge part of the advertising landscape,...

What the Omnicom-IPG Mega-Merger Could Mean for Agency Talent and Clients

11 December 2024 at 09:40
The recent announcement of Omnicom's acquisition of IPG got me thinking about my early days working for both holding companies. I started my career in media at BBDO, buying television. Back then, media and creative worked together under one roof, and holding companies were only beginning to consolidate their power. It was a simpler time...

The Creative Agencies to Watch in the Omnicom-IPG Merger

Industry insiders predict that Omnicom Group's takeover of Interpublic Group (IPG) will likely lead to the consolidation and elimination of legacy creative agency brands. Omnicom announced on Monday (Dec. 9) that it is acquiring rival holding company IPG, creating the world's largest advertising group. The new company will be called Omnicom, and leadership anticipates it...

The Omnicom-IPG Acquisition Looks Like a Good Bet. Here’s Why It May Also Be a Risky One

11 December 2024 at 02:56
Omnicom's Monday announcement of its plans to acquire Interpublic Group became the latest tremor in the already shaky ground of the agency world. If the deal goes through, it'll create the largest ad shop in the world and one that, to quote the joint press release, will "bring together the industry's deepest bench of marketing...

What the Omnicom-IPG deal means for workers across the global ad industry

9 December 2024 at 11:10
Omnicom John Wren IPG Philippe Krakowksy
Omnicom CEO John Wren and IPG Philippe Krakowsky announced on Monday the merger of their companies. Wren will continue to lead the new, larger Omnicom.

Omnicom

  • The Omnicom-IPG mega-merger will create waves across the ad industry.
  • Mergers are highly disruptive in the short term, and opportunistic rivals could pounce.
  • Ad industry workers should expect concerned clients and bruised egos as the two companies combine.

A coming mega-merger is set to make waves across the advertising world, especially among the millions of people employed by ad agencies globally.

On Monday, Omnicom announced a $13 billion agreement to acquire fellow US advertising agency business Interpublic Group. The deal would create the world's largest advertising agency holding company.

Industry insiders shared their thoughts with Business Insider on how the merger could impact individual workers at Omnicom and IPG, as well as in the industry at large. They said ad industry workers should expect disruption like job cuts and opportunistic rivals swooping in for concerned clients as the new Omnicom takes shape.

Prepare for job cuts

As with many horizontal mergers, job cuts seem inevitable.

Omnicom said Monday the transaction would "generate $750 million in annual cost synergies" as it consolidates its operations with IPG.

Steve Boehler, the founder of marketing and management consulting company Mercer Island Group, predicted in a LinkedIn post that "thousands" of people would lose their jobs.

Job security in the ad agency world has been increasingly hard to come by. Agencies often lay off entire teams when they lose a major client. US advertising, PR, and related services employment fell by 300 jobs to 522,900 in November, despite overall US employment rebounding, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

AI could also negatively impact the advertising job market. The research firm Forrester said last year that the rise of automation could lead to the loss of 32,000 jobs within ad agencies by 2030, about 7.5% of the total worldwide agency workforce.

Expect short-term merger turbulence and questions from clients

Merging two companies with 100,000 people, dozens of different agency brands, and hundreds of offices across the globe will not be a simple task.

"It's a massive integration risk," said Martin Sorrell, the executive chair of rival agency S4 Capital, who led WPP for more than 30 years. Sorrell has been an active acquirer of businesses throughout his career.

The companies could also dispose of assets. IPG announced recently that it would sell its digital ad agency Huge to a private equity firm and had said earlier this year it was also looking to offload R/GA, the agency famed for its work for Nike. IPG said the companies would continue to act independently until the deal closes and that during that time they would continue advancing strategic plans that had previously been announced.

Some clients will also have questions, particularly if the combination means their agency is working for one of their direct rivals.

On a call with analysts on Monday, Omnicom CEO John Wren downplayed the threat of client conflicts.

"Are there clients that we have to sit in the coming weeks and months and assure them that we still love them quite as much as we did prior to this morning? Yes." Wren said. "But clients are what drive us every morning when we wake up."

Egos will be bruised

A proposed merger between Omnicom and Publicis Groupe memorably failed in 2014 after the two companies couldn't agree on which executives should hold key positions, such as the CEO role.

Omnicom and Publicis leaders John Wren and Maurice Levy
John Wren and Publicis CEO Maurice Levy couldn't find a way to combine their companies that both sides agreed on. The proposed Omnicom-Publicis deal fell apart in 2014.

Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

While the Omnicom-IPG deal appears more straightforward, there will be some humbling as the company looks to reduce duplicative roles and some execs are looked over for the top roles.

On Monday's call, Wren said he wasn't worried about senior people looking to change their careers as a result of the merger.

If you're in one of these roles, you are in demand

Omnicom and IPG executives on Monday talked up the potential for combining their technology platforms, the use of data and analytics, and disciplines like media trading and customer-relationship management.

"Superstar creators and creatives will also be in demand, as well as good strategists, in all disciplines," said Simon Francis, CEO of marketing consultancy Flock Associates. "But, lots of other roles will become diminished."

Jay Wilson, VP and analyst for the research company Gartner, said job candidates looking to strengthen their rΓ©sumΓ©s should consider that high-performing brands are looking for strong performers in areas like business strategy, strategic thinking, and data analysis.

"Advertising and marketing workers certainly need to upskill on Gen-AI skills as well," Wilson said.

Smaller independent agencies could benefit

As Omnicom and IPG work through the merger, there will be opportunities for rival agencies to pounce.

"Competitors will decide to target you and go through all your clients and your best staff, it's inevitable," a former Publicis Groupe exec said Monday. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect career prospects. Their identity is known to BI.

Nimble independent agencies that aren't encumbered with legacy businesses could offer good career opportunities for people who don't want to deal with the complexity of a giant network.

"Certain people will make life or business-style decisions to say, 'God, I don't want to be in this oil tanker and I'd rather jump into a speed boat,'" said a former WPP veteran, who asked not to be named in order to protect their business relationships. Their identity is known to BI.

With fewer big holding companies to choose between, consolidation could drive up prices for clients, which could also present more opportunities for smaller rivals to undercut the incumbents on fees, the WPP veteran added.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Omnicom takeover of Interpublic to create the world's biggest advertising group

9 December 2024 at 05:29
John Wren, Omnicom Group
John Wren is CEO of Omnicom.

Omnicom Group

  • Omnicom is taking over the Interpublic Group to create the world's largest ad-agency business.
  • The deal is expected to generate annual cost savings of $750 million.
  • John Wren will remain CEO of Omnicom, while his counterpart Philippe Krakowsky will be co-COO.

Omnicom is taking over Interpublic Group in a deal expected to create the world's biggest advertising and marketing agency business, the US advertising company said on Monday.

The two had been in third and fourth place in the highly competitive ad-agency sector, but a combined entity would eclipse both London-based WPP and France's Publicis in terms of expected revenue and market capitalization.

Advertising industry insiders said the deal underscores the disruption faced by agency holding companies. Agencies face the dilemma of helping clients leverage tech while at the same time risking being displaced by AI and automation.

Industry insiders said the new company's added scale could bring benefits like the leverage to strike better deals with tech and media companies. It could also allow them to combine some offerings and eliminate duplicative roles. However, some industry insiders warned that merging the two companies could be highly disruptive in the short term, which could prompt their rivals to try to poach clients and key staffers.

Investors will receive 0.344 Omnicom shares for each IPG share they own. Omnicom shareholders will own 60.6% of the combined group. The deal is expected to generate annual cost savings of $750 million.

Omnicom was valued at about $20 billion at Friday's close. Its shares fell around 4% in early morning trading after the deal was officially confirmed. IPG was worth $10.9 billion at Friday's close, and its stock jumped by around 12% on Monday morning. The shares of competitor ad companies WPP and Publicis Groupe were also up following the Omnicom-IPG news.

The new Omnicom will have more than 100,000 staffers and offer services across media, precision marketing, customer relationship management, data, digital commerce, advertising, healthcare, public relations, and branding.

"Now is the perfect time to bring together our technologies, capabilities, talent and geographic footprints to bring clients superior, data-driven outcomes," John Wren, Omnicom CEO said in a statement on Monday.

Philippe Krakowsky, IPG's CEO, said the two companies had "highly complementary offerings, geographic presence, and cultures."

Wren will remain CEO of Omnicom, while Krakowsky and current Omnicom COO Daryl Simm will be copresidents and co-COOs of Omnicom. Three members of the IPG board, including Krakowsky, will join the Omnicom board.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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