Published: September 16, 2018

Martin Sorrell’s New Business Plan: Cut Creative Agencies Out of the Loop Altogether

After overseeing some of the world’s top creative shops for more than three decades, Martin Sorrell no longer seems to think they play a crucial role in advertising.

The prospectus for his new venture, S4 Capital, went live Tuesday. And while the 191-page document includes quite a bit of information about S4’s primary property, MediaMonks, and its plans for expansion, it does not mention acquiring any creative agencies.
The prospectus does, however, note the decreasing value of traditional advertising as clients demand ever more digital services. Even more significantly, it lists its own primary competitors as “consultancy businesses with an emphasis on technological services in the digital marketing arena” such as IBM iX, Accenture Interactive, Deloitte Digital and PwC in addition to production companies like B-Reel, Stink, Psyop, Omnicom’s EG+, Publicis Groupe’s Prodigious, WPP’s own Hogarth and web development shops like R/GA, AKQA and Digitas.

Nowhere does the document mention companies such as Ogilvy, Y&R, Grey or JWT. S4 Capital’s “principal source of income” will be MediaMonks itself, and “targeted sectors [for future acquisitions] will include content, data analytics, media planning and digital media buying.”

In other words, Sorrell and his partners believe S4 Capital can become a major player in the ad world without a big creative shop on its roster, potentially rendering such companies irrelevant.

The document presents that argument in visual form.

This chart displays the model, with MediaMonks going directly to the client. If S4 Capital were to acquire a major media buying agency and a brand strategy firm, it could theoretically capture all steps in this process.

“MediaMonks increasingly works with brands and clients directly (rather than through advertising agencies),” the document reads. “In 2017, approximately 83 percent of revenue was derived from direct engagement with brands. This compares to 32 percent in 2015. The Group believes that this provides MediaMonks with the opportunity to build stronger relations with clients and improve its Gross Profit.”

In addition to the larger MediaMonks organization, S4 also now owns several small creative operations associated with that company, including eBuilders, Superhero Cheesecake and Made.For.Digital.

The prospectus also clarifies that this model presents some risks, because MediaMonks usually works on a per-project basis. This means “clients moving their accounts to another digital media production company on relatively short notice,” or restricting their work due to conflicts of interest could affect the company’s ability to bring in the desired revenue.

Finally, the document makes clear that Sorrell will be running the show as the chairman “and persons considered to be acting in concert with him will hold approximately 26.22 percent” of company shares.

"The reality is, creative agencies have been struggling industrywide."

Goldman Sachs highlights weakness of U.S. creative shops

The prospectus comes less than a week after a report on WPP from Goldman Sachs, which hosted an investor meeting with new CEO Mark Read and chief financial officer Paul Richardson.

The research paper indicates that Read told investors of plans to simplify the network’s structure and “gave a timeline of three years to turn around the business” while stating that he does not want to disrupt global operations by rushing into a restructuring process. Goldman Sachs analysts compared this to Publicis Groupe’s 2018-2020 turnaround plan.

Most interestingly, WPP management “highlighted U.S. creative as the most structurally challenged area,” especially when compared to a media operation that “has recovered” thanks, in large part, to big wins like Mars and Mondelez. In keeping with Sorrell’s own strategy, the leadership of WPP aims to recover some of the revenue lost via creative budget cuts with a greater focus on digital.

In a striking coincidence, this analysis comes days after WPP’s dedicated Ford agency lost a significant assignment to Wieden + Kennedy. Ford is the holding group’s largest single client. Goldman Sachs maintains a “neutral” stance on WPP as an investment opportunity.

“The reality is creative agencies have been struggling industrywide,” said Pivotal Research Group senior analyst Brian Wieser, who recently attended a WPP management meeting in London. “I think that is arguably the single biggest factor causing holding companies to decelerate as they did starting in the second half of 2016.”

Wieser called this conclusion “ironic,” given that it arrives at the same time Nike’s Colin Kaepernick campaign illustrated “the power of creative.”

“It’s more a mark of how most marketers have demonstrated that they optimize against trees rather than forests in an effort to drive costs down,” Wieser said. “Unfortunately, that sort of activity has accelerated. Traditional creative agencies haven’t done enough to provide digital experience offerings, nor have they been able to persuade clients that they will be all about the big idea.”

Sorrell and his partners are betting marketers around the world agree.

Sorrell’s statement

“Yesterday’s publication of the prospectus ahead of relisting marks an important third step in three months for S4 Capital, having recently agreed the acquisition of Derriston and its merger with MediaMonks,” Sorrell said in a statement provided by his spokesperson.

“S4 Capital intends to provide global, multinational, regional, local clients and influencer-driven millennial brands with new age/new era digital marketing services concentrated in three key areas initially—further development of a global digital content platform; first-party data fueling both digital media planning and creative ideas too; and, finally, digital media buying. Listening to clients of all kinds, it seems apparent they want these services delivered faster, better and cheaper, by more agile and responsive organizations, either co-located with them or alone.”

Sorrell mentioned MediaMonks’ existing clients, including Adidas, Corona, Google, Johnson & Johnson, Netflix and Shell and its desire to explore “new areas of operation in line with our strategic objectives, in data analytics and digital media planning and buying.”

“Welcome back to the future,” he concluded.

https://www.adweek.com/agencies/martin-sorrells-new-business-plan-cut-creative-agencies-out-of-the-loop-altogether/

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