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Are creative shops on borrowed time?

As WPP recently revealed that all its creative agencies had returned negative growth in the five years to 2019, what does the future hold for this traditional agency model?

Deep dive: Are creative shops on borrowed time?

It was a rare insight into the creative agency struggle. At WPP鈥檚 recent Capital Markets Day, the holding company showed the relative growth of its agencies.聽

From 2014-19, all WPP鈥檚 creative agencies suffered negative net sales growth (revenue less pass-through costs) 鈥 a marked contrast from their media and digital counterparts.聽

Today, three of the four agencies (Grey, JWT and Y&R) have been merged with WPP鈥檚 more digitally focused shops, leaving Ogilvy, which already had broader capabilities like PR and CRM.

So why did the agencies perform so poorly? And does it show that the standalone creative agency is in terminal decline?

According to WPP chief executive Mark Read, creative agencies simply found it tougher to adapt to the digital landscape. While media agencies easily reallocated client budget into digital channels, clients were now asking for things creative agencies did not have the technical expertise to deliver, such as websites and CRM.聽

鈥淵ou can only conclude that they didn鈥檛 reinvent their offer quickly enough,鈥 Read says.聽

This is a concern for agencies across the industry facing the double hit of digital transformation, which is radically altering client requirements, and clients (and their strengthened procurement departments) asking for more work for less money.聽As Kingston Smith鈥檚 partner Esther Carder says, 鈥淧rofitability hasn鈥檛 recovered since the 2008 crash. It hasn鈥檛 been an easy time for agencies to make money.鈥澛

Yet many agencies have succeeded, like Adam & Eve/DDB, which experienced rapid growth over the same period.聽鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 right to say creative agencies are in decline. Some of them are, some aren鈥檛,鈥 James Murphy, founder of NCA and A&E, says. 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 a shortage of opportunities for creative agencies to grow. But there鈥檚 a shortage of the talent that can convert those opportunities into growth.鈥澛

Some argue that certain factors stifling growth are specific to holding companies. Mother鈥檚 global chief executive, Michael Wall, cites the large management tier and cost base that makes listed agencies less agile and adaptable. Quarterly reporting can also create short-termism as agencies aim for a centrally decided revenue target at all costs, which can lead to chasing business that is not very profitable or the right fit.聽

Independent agencies do appear to have performed better over a similar period. The 15 independents in Moore Kingston Smith鈥檚 annual survey of agency performance showed a collective compound annual growth rate of 6% from 2015-19 with a third showing individual decline. In comparison, this figure was just 1% for the 20 agencies owned by listed groups, with half showing a decline.

Read says the holding company structure is not the problem. If that were true, WPP鈥檚 media and digital agencies would also be doing badly. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the way the businesses were set up and the expertise of the people,鈥 he adds.聽

鈥淐reative agencies are presenting a big old conundrum to the holding companies,鈥 Larissa Vince, chief executive of Now, says. 鈥淭hey operate in a declining market, but are full of brilliant people with important client relationships. Can they merge their way to more positive numbers? Or would they be better to accept that creative agencies bring a different kind of benefit to the overall offering?鈥

Ownership aside, everyone agrees that growth is crucial to attract the right people, clients and revenue. The only way to do that, Read says, 鈥渋s if they reinvent their offer with ideas at the heart鈥.

So what can creative agencies do to strike back?

WPP鈥檚 answer is to broaden its offer by combining companies. Since VMLY&R was created, it increased its quarterly like-for-like net sales growth from minus 10% to about 5% in Q1 2020. Although this is now in negative figures after Covid.聽

Other agencies are creating similar joined-up offerings, scrapping competing P&Ls, boosting digital expertise and setting up production studios to keep more client budget in-house.聽

But this requires agencies to let go of their egos around the type of work they want to create. 鈥淔or far too long, lots of creative agencies have applied their creativity to what they are interested in rather than what the client needs,鈥 Magnus Djaba, global president of Saatchi & Saatchi, says. 鈥淭his binary obsession with media channels is a noughties conversation. We apply just as much passion, chutzpah and belief into every single element of the funnel. When you do that, what I see is growth.鈥澛

Read agrees clients want creativity expressed 鈥渁s an idea, not a 30-second ad鈥. The prize for those who break free from specific channels is 鈥渁 golden age of creativity鈥, where 鈥渋deas can take many forms from the Fearless Girl听摆pictured above] to [Burger King鈥檚] mouldy Whopper ad鈥.

Ultimately, the real test is whether creative agencies are producing high-quality work with significant impact for clients. 鈥淥ur biggest value is the work. Get that right and you have the right to ask for a fair price,鈥 Wall says.聽

As Djaba puts it: 鈥淧rove that creativity is the most powerful business tool, change things with creativity and do it first. If you keep doing that, you鈥檒l be alright.鈥

Picture: SOPA Images/Getty Images

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