
Adweek
published a lengthy report on the perceived awfulness of Omnicom employee perks
and benefits compared to what legacy IPG workers allegedly enjoyed. Why,
there’s talk of forming a union to combat the oh-so-unfair conditions.
Sounds like
former IPG employees are experiencing the 5
stages of grief applied to job status, compounded by PTSD associated with facing
ruthless
RIFs—or
witnessing teammates erased from rosters.
But here’s a
reality check.
Sorry, the
Omnicom package is not significantly worse. It all probably evens out in the
end.
Unlimited
PTO, for example, is a farce that certain White holding companies have adopted,
knowing most employees won’t take full advantage; plus, requests for time off
must still be approved by managers. In short, unlimited is highly limited and
restricted.
If former
IPG employees are frustrated, consider aiming the ire at former IPG leadership.
The
confederacy of dunces that ran IPG failed to build and sustain a professional, profitable,
and prosperous enterprise, ultimately pruning
practices, terminating
troops, and setting the stage for takeover.
IPG was a
dinosaur—inevitably devoured by a slightly larger dinosaur—in a prehistoric land
where inhabitants are heading toward extinction.
Spend the
holidays feeling grateful for the opportunity to be part of the biggest
brontosaurus.
EXCLUSIVE:
How Omnicom Stole Christmas Week And Nixed Other Perks From IPG’s Benefits
Package
Employee
handbooks and benefits documents obtained by ADWEEK reveal sweeping cuts to
retirement plans, parental leave, healthcare, severance, holidays, and PTO for
U.S. based employees.
By Audrey Kemp
Days after
Omnicom closed its acquisition of Interpublic Group, U.S. employees returned
from Thanksgiving break to a harsh reality: thousands of layoffs, dissolved
agencies, and a new benefits package that workers describe as “the worst
[they’ve] ever had.”
Employee
handbooks and benefits documents obtained by ADWEEK show the new Omnicom’s
policies are a significant downgrade from IPG’s legacy package in the
U.S.
Those coming
from IPG will lose a number of paid vacation days while trading in for reduced
parental leave and holiday time, new severance limits, health plans that can
result in higher costs, and a return-to-office requirement that affects raises
and severance eligibility.
As one former
IPG business manager told ADWEEK, “It’s the worst benefits package I’ve ever
seen in my life.”
Three legacy
IPG employees spoke with ADWEEK on the condition of anonymity about how
insiders are reacting to the new benefits package.
Omnicom
declined to comment on the changes to employee benefits.
Goodbye,
guaranteed 401(k) match
Among all the
benefits outlined in Omnicom’s materials, workers say the 401(k) overhaul is
the most shocking.
Under IPG’s
former plan, employees received a 50% match on up to 6% of their contributions,
vesting over three years and hitting every pay period, plan documents show.
It’s a system several workers described as predictable and “trustworthy.”
Omnicom’s plan,
however, includes a fully discretionary match of up to 50% on just 5% of
contributions, paid once a year and only for employees still on payroll on
December 31.
“The fact that
it’s discretionary is disgusting and feels weird,” the IPG business manager
said. “It’s decided at the end of the year if you actually get it or not.”
The new
structure undermines long-term financial planning, according to a former IPG
health creative. “You don’t have a guaranteed [match] rate,” they said. “It
hits at the end of the year, so you don’t get the benefit of consistent time in
the market.”
“It’s a huge,
huge cut,” said a former IPG employee who works in media. “It’s just so bad.”
PTO and
holidays disappear
IPG’s 2024
employee handbook, reviewed by ADWEEK, shows employees across many of its
agencies had unlimited paid time off (PTO). Offices were closed the week
between Christmas and New Year’s, as well as during an August Appreciation
Week. Staffers also got Election Day and Indigenous Peoples’ Day off, plus
monthly wellness days.
Omnicom’s new
structure wipes much of that away. Employees now receive a set 10 to 15
vacation days, depending on tenure, with strict accrual rules and no floating
holidays, no holiday closure periods beyond the actual holiday, and no wellness
days. The maximum amount of annual vacation is 20 days, reserved only for those
who have been at the company for more than 10 years.
A source
familiar with the transition said the new holiday calendar will not take effect
for IPG employees until 2026, but ADWEEK was unable to verify this with
Omnicom.
The business
manager estimated that former IPG employees had a total of 38 days off between
holidays and wellness days. The new Omnicom package is “a 60% decrease in days
off that aren’t PTO,” they said.
One detail
stunned staffers the most: if an employee takes vacation the day before or
after a holiday, they won’t be paid for the holiday.
“It’s probably
the worst PTO package I’ve ever had,” said the media employee.
Parental
leave slashed from six months to 10 weeks
Under IPG,
birthing parents could combine short-term disability, state family-leave
programs, IPG’s Employee & Family Leave, parental leave days, and unpaid
FMLA to reach as much as six months of time off post-birth. The leave could be
taken in segments, allowing parents to divide caregiving time or coordinate
with partners.
“You could work
it out with your partner, and be there for your kids as best as you both can,”
the business manager said.
Documents
obtained by ADWEEK show Omnicom offers 10 total weeks of paid parental leave,
which must be taken as a continuous block and used within 20 weeks of birth,
adoption, or foster placement. The policy also requires employees to exhaust
all state or disability benefits before Omnicom pays anything.
“We’re going
from a flexible, maximum six months to a rigid, not flexible, 10 weeks,” said
the business manager. The media employee added the new policy is “so absolutely
cruel to the workers and their children.”
Healthcare
costs rise for “lower quality” coverage
Workers
described IPG’s healthcare plans as comparatively affordable, with multiple
options — including inexpensive HMOs — and single combined deductibles that
made costs easier to manage. Several employees said they previously paid into
UnitedHealthcare or Cigna plans that felt “straightforward” and less confusing
than what they are now being offered.
According to
Omnicom’s 2026 benefits materials, employees will have access to four Aetna
medical plans: an EPO option, a Premier PPO with a lower deductible, a Health
Savings Plan and a high-deductible HSA-eligible plan. Workers told ADWEEK the
lineup is more limited and more expensive, with some plans carrying higher
premiums and separate deductibles for medical and prescription drugs. Employees
may also opt into a more expensive plan with broader out-of-network coverage.
“It’s generally
more expensive for lower quality care,” said the health creative. “If you do
want the premier package, it’s notably more expensive.”
Return to
office–or forfeit your severance
IPG did not
enforce a return-to-office mandate before the acquisition, according to
employees; many teams operated fully remote or hybrid.
Several workers
said Omnicom’s policy, which requires employees to be in-office three days per
week with a stated intent to move to five, represents an abrupt cultural
change. Managers have been instructed to begin bringing in teams
immediately.
The policy also
allows Omnicom to deny raises and promotions to employees who do not comply,
and explicitly states that workers terminated for violating the policy are not
eligible for severance.
The business
manager described it as “jarring,” while health creative added that Omnicom “is
obsessed with RTO [return to office].”
Omnicom’s
severance policy in general is also less favorable than IPG’s, providing
roughly one week of pay per year of service, capped at 12 weeks for employees
with five or more years of tenure.
IPG’s domestic
employee termination policy, reviewed by ADWEEK, guaranteed employees two
weeks’ pay after three months of service, three weeks at two years, and an
additional week of salary for each year through their 14th anniversary. Workers
there for more than 14 years earned two extra weeks per year — a structure that
could easily exceed 20 or 30 weeks of pay.
“It’s the worst
severance package I’ve ever seen,” the health creative said of the Omnicom
plan.
Workers
describe a breaking point
Many employees
are interpreting the new benefits package as an attempt to push people out
voluntarily, in addition to the 4,000 staffers already cut from the combined
company’s ranks. Omnicom declined to comment on potential future layoffs.
“I’m fully
expecting to get laid off or fired in the next six to 12 months,” said the
media employee. “I don’t think Omnicom is going to keep most of us around.”
The business
manager pointed out that younger talent is especially disheartened. “Younger
talent who entered the industry in the last couple of years have only ever
experienced layoff after layoff for pretty blatant shareholder value gains,”
they said. “We’re at the precipice of it not being sustainable for employees.”
Some employees
said the upheaval has revived conversations about organizing.
“I’ve probably
talked to three people about unionization in the last couple of days,” said the
business manager. “With the way these holding companies are operating, it’s so
clearly a race to the bottom.”
“Workers are
shafted in every possible way,” the media employee said, adding that the real
obstacle is leverage. “If we went on strike, they’d replace us in 30 seconds.”