
Adweek published a perspective from its
resident marketing professor-fractional consultant-uninformed analyst—who,
incidentally, seems open to selling his columns to any
trade journal or
business
publication seeking
pseudo thought leader content—speculating on the WPP never-ending story.
There’s even
a disclosure-disclaimer indicating his wannabe MasterClass services are
available—probably at subscription rates—to White advertising agencies.
The author
declares the real WPP story is not about revenue decline; rather, it’s margin.
In recent
months, WPP presumably won and retained business via low-balling tactics, but
will clients eventually cough up mo’ money and pay standard costs?
Surely Eviscerate28 does not intend to position WPP as the bargain
basement brand among competitive holding companies.
Yet the
author—having zero real-life experience in Adland—appears to miss the true
plot.
It’s not
whether clients will pay more—indeed, it’s will clients pay at all?
As
previously mentioned, WPP has led the commoditization of Adland.
Now, the
single White operating company has nothing unique to provide—at any price tag.
The only
people profiting from WPP are Monday morning marketing quarterbacks. And the
most annoying are those who’ve never played in the ad game.
The Real WPP
Story Is in the Margin, Not the Revenue
Despite
promising around $675 million in savings, the only question that matters is
whether clients will pay more
By Mark Ritson
Disclosure:
Mark Ritson’s
MiniMBA course has been offered to Omnicom Oceania staff. Omnicom is a
competitor to WPP.
When WPP posted
its first-quarter numbers last week, one line did all the talking. Net revenue
down 6.7% like-for-like. Its key unit WPP Media is down 8.5%.
The company
described this performance, with commendable composure, “ahead of
expectations.” Which tells you everything about the expectations now governing
the big end of advertising.
The more
instructive story isn’t the revenue decline. It’s margin.
WPP’s full-year
2025 headline operating margin came in at 13%, down from 15% in 2024.
Two hundred
basis points in 12 months—the kind of compression you associate with recessions
or category collapse, not with a company that has a turnaround strategy
in-market.
The Elevate28
strategy, unveiled in February, promises around $675 million in gross annual
savings by 2028 at a cash cost of around $540 million to deliver. CFO Joanne
Wilson told analysts that staff bonuses suppressed in 2025 will need to be
rebuilt through 2026. That cuts both ways: employees get paid properly again,
but the lever WPP used to protect margin last year is now spent.
On the Q1 call,
Adrien de Saint Hilaire of Bank of America asked the question every CMO should
be asking. Revenue with WPP’s top 25 clients was down low single digits even
excluding losses.
What drove the
decline? Reduced scope of work, fee pressure, or outright budget cuts?
The answer
determines whether WPP has a cyclical problem or a structural one
Scope
reductions are cyclical: clients buying less of the same thing. Budget cuts are
cyclical: economies contract, marketing contracts with them.
Fee pressure is
structural: clients paying less for the same thing. That is a different animal
entirely. It doesn’t respond to patience or strategy decks.
The answer,
given on the Q4 2025 call, from Cindy Rose herself, confirmed it was all
three—and that WPP anticipates “some downward pricing pressure from AI
productivity,” which it plans to offset through cross-selling and capturing
more of clients’ addressable spend. Translation: fees are falling, and the plan
is to win volume elsewhere in the client’s wallet to compensate.
The numbers
make the case plainly. On a like-for-like basis, gross revenue declined 4.0%,
while net revenue declined 6.7%.
Pass-through
costs—the media and production money flowing through WPP’s books to third
parties—are holding up better than the agency-fee line. Clients are still
spending. WPP is just earning less per dollar of that spend.
WPP is winning
business too: the U.K. government media account, Reckitt, Estee Lauder, Jaguar.
Revenue is still falling. Winning accounts while revenue drops is the
diagnostic signature of a business defending share by cutting price. Every
account won on tighter terms resets the floor for the next pitch.
Volume losses
are real. Wilson flagged a 500 to 600 basis-point drag from gross client losses
in 2026, up from 300 to 400 last year. Major U.S. and U.K. accounts walked. CPG
and telecom, media, and entertainment spend is genuinely weaker.
Fee pressure
and volume loss are not separate stories
They are the
same story told twice. Clients negotiate harder on price, and walk when WPP
won’t move, for the same reason: the holding company proposition has lost its
differentiation.
Accenture Song
owns the top of the funnel with strategy and tech. In-housing has gutted the
middle, capturing retainer budgets clients once handed over without a second
thought. Meta will take the rest. AI is eating production and media planning
from below. WPP, like every big agency peer, faces a decade of simultaneous
price and volume compression because it is no longer the default answer to a
question only it can answer.
Elevate28’s
$675 million in savings is a margin-defense operation—buying time while
structural pricing erodes the top line. It can absorb a year or two of
compression. It cannot solve what is causing it.
The harder
task, the one WPP’s leadership avoided for a decade, is rebuilding a reason for
clients to pay full price. WPP Open and the Adobe partnership are moves in that
direction. Whether they produce a defensible category-of-one position, or
simply make the cost reduction on commodity work cheaper to execute, is the
question the market is now asking every holding company. Quarter by quarter.
Pitch by pitch. Margin point by margin point.