Saturday, July 18, 2026

17540: Honestly, New Farmers Insurance Campaign Is BS.

Advertising Age spotlighted the newish campaign for Farmers Insurance produced by new White advertising agency Dentsu Creative, with media duties being handled by new White media agency Havas Media.

 

The campaign theme declares, “Honesty Is Our Policy.”

 

Good luck promoting that platform. After all, advertising practitioners and insurance salespeople are consistently ranked among the least-trusted professions.

 

Farmers Insurance unveils a pink-drenched refresh and tweak to its jingle

 

By Tim Nudd

 

Farmers Insurance is refreshing its brand with a coat of pink paint and a change to its famous jingle.

 

The company’s first major brand refresh in several years debuts in a campaign from new agency Dentsu Creative. The effort, themed “Honesty Is Our Policy,” debuts today (July 13) across TV, digital, social, out-of-home and experiential. It includes updated branding that prominently features bright pink visuals and a reworked version of the insurer’s longtime jingle.

 

A minimalist 30-second anthem spot … speaks directly to viewers against a solid pink background, delivering a straightforward message about understanding insurance. The spot also introduces a choir that will become a recurring brand element as part of the new platform.

 

Longtime spokesman J.K. Simmons is absent from the new campaign. “Professor Burke has been a strong and recognizable part of the Farmers brand for many years, but all professors reach their tenure, and we’ve retired him from the new campaign,” Farmers told Ad Age.

 

The choir sings much of the dialogue in the melody of the famous Farmers audio signature. At the end, the “We Are Farmers” refrain has been rewritten as “You Have Farmers,” shifting the focus from the company to the customer.

 

Supporting spots have a similar structure.

 

The repositioning reflects Farmers’ effort to address what it sees as lingering confusion around insurance policies and coverage details. Rather than emphasizing products or pricing, the campaign focuses on helping consumers better understand what their policies include and how coverage works, using more direct language across marketing and customer communications.

 

“The strategy is grounded in a simple belief: our customers’ insurance coverage should be easy to understand, with no jargon, no big words and no lawyer needed to make sense of it,” said Eleanor Solomon, head of creative for Farmers Insurance. “Farmers is introducing tools that help make insurance easier to navigate—highlighting what is and is not covered, offering coverage reviews even if your policy is with another insurer, and, in some cases, helping consumers explore alternatives when Farmers isn’t a fit for them.”

 

“The strongest brands don’t abandon their history, they build on it,” said Andres Arlia, executive creative director at Dentsu Creative. “We took the equity Farmers has earned over decades and reimagined it for a moment when consumers are looking for transparency over jargon and understanding over complexity. Every creative choice, from the visual refresh to evolving ‘We Are Farmers’ into ‘You Have Farmers,’ was designed to make the brand feel useful, human and relevant.”

 

The work is Dentsu Creative’s first major campaign for Farmers since being named the insurer’s creative agency of record. Before moving to Dentsu this spring, the Farmers account had been at RPA since 2010. 

Friday, July 17, 2026

17539: WPP CPO WTF.

More About Advertising reported on impending layoffs at WPP, spotlighting the new WPP Media Chief People Officer, who will likely be among key players executing the latest RIF.

 

The content closed by asking: Is there a People job in [Adland] that doesn’t really mean less people?

 

That’s a good question, prompting a Google search to define the C-suite function. According to M&A Executive Search, CPO responsibilities include:

 

• Shaping organizational culture and employee experience

 

• Developing DE&I (Diversity, Equity & Inclusion) programs

 

• Creating leadership development initiatives

 

• Driving employee engagement strategies

 

• Aligning the workforce with the company vision and values

 

• Building talent acquisition competitive advantages

 

• Fostering a sense of purpose and belonging

 

Okay, except no way can a new CPO shape organizational culture and employee experience at a global flaming dumpster that is burning out of control.

 

DEIBA+ programs have already been abandoned.

 

Leadership development cannot commence until after dealing with honcho redundancies, resignations, and restructurings.

 

Employee engagement strategies likely involve mandated rah-rah events.

 

Expressing the company vision and values won’t happen before WPP CEO Cindy Rose hatches and articulates the grand scheme. For now, it’s chirping crickets.

 

Talent acquisition competitive advantages are trumped by talent termination.

 

Sense of purpose and belonging? Nonsense of purpose and belonging would be a more appropriate term.

 

In short, given WPP’s current death-spiraling direction, the CPO role could be handled via AI—or eliminated entirely.

 

WPP sets sail for another round of job cuts

 

By Stephen Foster

 

WPP is reportedly embarking on another round of job cuts and newly-hired chief people officer at WPP Media Darren Minshall looks as though he’s been hired to lead the charge. Or maybe retreat. WPP Media employs about 40,000 people.

 

Like all such execs Minshall [above], who’s worked at numerous companies including, back in the day, Havas and MullenLowe, says the right things including “AI isn’t the hard part. Leading people through it is” and “AI should improve work, not blindly replace it” which may reassure some WPP Media folk although the embattled holding company, first under Mark Read and now under Cindy Rose, has made no secret that it sees AI as the secret sauce to put it back on the road to growth.

 

So will Minshall be the grim reaper, on the lines of George Clooney in the movie Up in the Air, where he plays corporate downsizer Ryan Bingham or someone to bring a little balance to the seemingly AI-obsessed holding company?

 

WPP is now divided into creative, media, production and commerce and most people expect its creative agencies to bear the brunt of tech-driven changes. When JWT, Y&R and Wunderman were lumped together with VML it was said to be the biggest creative agency in the world with about 30,000 people. WPP also has Ogilvy of course, which seems to be staying above the fray.

 

But the old GroupM media operation comprising EssenceMediacom, Mindshare and Wavemaker was pretty substantial and numerous too and, although its fortunes have recovered to a degree, it has still to return to winning ways for the world’s really big media accounts, most of which are at Publicis with some others at Omnicom.

 

Is there a People job in adland that doesn’t really mean less people?

Thursday, July 16, 2026

17538: On Farmers Insurance And City Slickers-Hucksters.

 

MediaPost reported Farmers Insurance named Havas Media as its new White media agency. Earlier in the year, the insurance company appointed Dentsu Creative as its new White advertising agency.

 

The only explanation for such mediocre firms winning media and creative duties must be the other White holding companies—Publicis Groupe, Omnicom, and WPP—already service insurance brands.

 

Referring to the latest campaign platform, the head of creative for Farmers Insurance declared, “The strategy is grounded in a simple belief: our customers’ insurance coverage should be easy to understand, with no jargon, no big words, and no lawyer needed to make sense of it.”

 

The same probably cannot be said for coordinating efforts between Havas Media and Dentsu Creative.

 

If there’s a policy covering marketing malpractice, Farmers Insurance should apply pronto.

 

Havas Media Named AOR For Farmers Insurance

 

By Steve McClellan

 

Farmers Insurance has appointed Havas Media as its new media agency of record after a review, the company confirmed today.  

 

Farmers’ estimated annual media expenditure is $51.5 million, according to agency research firm COMvergence.

 

“Effective immediately, Havas will support media strategy, planning, buying, activation and measurement across Farmers Insurance’s national marketing initiatives,” the company stated. 

 

Earlier this year, Farmers Insurance launched separate creative and media agency reviews. The firm announced that it had named Dentsu Creative as its new media agency in April. 

 

The firm previously worked with both RPA and Zenith on media assignments. RPA had been the firm’s longtime creative agency. 

 

Separately, the company unveiled the first work from Dentsu Creative and new assets that the company said are designed to make its offerings easier for consumers to understand. Changes include the new Farmers Coverage on a Page resource, a snapshot of coverage included in select Farmers auto and home policies. Also new: Farmers Coverage Review sessions.  

 

“The strategy is grounded in a simple belief: our customers’ insurance coverage should be easy to understand, with no jargon, no big words, and no lawyer needed to make sense of it,” stated Eleanor Solomon, head of creative for Farmers Insurance.

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

17537: WPP Reduces Staff, Increases Exclusivity.

 

Advertising Age reported WPP plans to eliminate hundreds more jobs in 2026 as the Roserrection advances.

 

Advertising icon Jay Chiat famously wondered, “How big can we get before we get bad?”

 

As this blog previously opined, WPP answered that question for holding companies decades ago. The global flaming dumpster continued answering the query for White advertising agencies, bundling and erasing iconic firms to create mediocre monstrosities like VML.

 

WPP CEO Cindy Rose now finds herself in the peculiar position of trying to answer, “How small can we get before we get bad?”

 

There’s something counterintuitive about improving WPP by firing thousands.

 

Rose can feel relieved DEIBA+ dedication disappeared before she joined, so Elevate28 need not be concerned with outdated imperatives such as fairness, equality, and justice.

 

Ad Age stated, “Cindy Rose has acknowledged that there will be job cuts and said that savings will come largely from eliminating duplicative finance and HR functions…” Um, Chief Diversity Officers and DEIBA+ teams were typically compartmentalized in the HR department.

 

It appears Elevate28 will elevate exclusivity, underrepresentation, and systemic racism—except for White women—potentially taking the industry back to 1928.

 

WPP plans to cut hundreds more jobs this year as its restructuring continues

 

By Ewan Larkin

 

WPP expects to cut jobs globally in the mid-to-high hundreds between now and the end of the year, according to a person familiar with the matter, as part of the company’s ongoing turnaround strategy.

 

Some employees were informed today of their roles being affected at WPP agencies including VML, though the scope of today’s cuts was not immediately clear. WPP and VML declined to comment for this story. WPP had 98,655 employees at the end of 2025, it previously reported.

 

The layoffs are part of WPP’s broader Elevate28 turnaround plan, under which the company is targeting £500 million ($678 million) in annual cost savings by 2028. CEO Cindy Rose has acknowledged that there will be job cuts and said that savings will come largely from eliminating duplicative finance and HR functions, cutting real estate costs and selling assets. The company has also reorganized into four core units: creative, production, media and enterprise solutions.

 

WPP’s workforce has contracted sharply in recent years. The British holding company ended 2025 with 8.7% fewer employees, accelerating from a 5.4% decline the year before. That left its workforce at the end of last year at about 1,200 employees below its 2020 level, when pandemic-era cuts reduced staffing by about 6.5%.



Contributing: Brian Bonilla and Jess Nagamoto

Monday, July 13, 2026

17536: OOH WPP VML ODN WTF.

The social media post depicted above from Outdoor Nation unintentionally underscores how Adland is a messy cesspool.

 

First, WPP Creative White advertising agency VML hatched the Wendy’s creative campaign to run in Indianapolis. Um, localized messaging is hardly groundbreaking—and this concept doesn’t even qualify as mediocre.

 

Next, Outdoor Nation boasting about its strategic media plan is pathetic too. Surely the strategizing, planning, and execution could have been handled via AI or any entry-level media wonk who wasn’t replaced by AI.

 

Additionally, WPP has been positioning itself as a single White operating company, offering simplicity, efficacy, and efficiency to clients. Yet Outdoor Nation is an independent vendor. So, why did VML partner with the Tennessee-based firm versus tapping WPP Media—given the global unit supposedly won the Wendy’s media account earlier this year?

 

Finally, the social media post and associated PR make no mention of Black-owned media involvement, which is outrageous given Blacks represent nearly 28% of Indianapolis’ population.

 

In summation, the OOH from VML, WPP, and ODN warrants WTF. 

Sunday, July 12, 2026

17535: DIY Multicultural Marketing From The Home Depot…?

ModernRetail at Digiday reported The Home Depot recognizes Latinos comprise a major revenue-generating opportunity, prompting World Cup promotional activities to reach the audience—because Latinos love soccer.

 

The Home Depot evicted BBDO as its White advertising agency earlier this year, moving marketing duties to in-house resources.

 

Plus, the retailer is among corporations that bowed to political pressures, quietly abandoning DEIBA+ dedication in 2025.

 

Is The Home Depot tapping internal or external experts to verify Latino-targeted messages are relevant, authentic, and culturally competent?

 

Are the multicultural initiatives receiving fair marketing budgets—or crumbs?

 

Are in-house resources such as Orange Apron Media and Studio Orange predominately White?

 

Don’t expect official statements—delivered in English or Spanish—anytime soon.

 

Hispanic shoppers and pro customers are key to The Home Depot’s World Cup retail media strategy

 

By Mitchell Parton

 

While The Home Depot is not a sports equipment or sports apparel retailer, its consumer base has given it ample reason to develop a comprehensive retail media strategy around the World Cup.

 

Customers often come to The Home Depot and other home improvement retailers to solve a problem or take on a project — especially working professionals like remodelers, painters, electricians, plumbers and other contractors.

Taryn Dominie, senior director and head of industry for Orange Apron Media — The Home Depot’s retail media network — said the diversity of the growing soccer fan base mirrors that of its customer base, especially among its pro customers. “A good majority of our pro customers are multicultural, and [The World Cup] just gives us a way to really connect in a deeper, more meaningful way with those pro customers,” she said.

 

Hispanics make up around 30% of the construction workforce in the U.S, and U.S. Hispanic consumers surveyed by Nielsen in 2024 or 2025 were 87% more likely to say they had watched a World Cup qualifier match in the past 12 months, according to a 2025 Nielsen report. Hispanic individuals are also 39% more likely than the total population to be avid Major League Soccer fans, Nielsen found.

 

Molly Battin, svp and CMO of The Home Depot, told the Hispanic Marketing Council last month that the company expects “multicultural” customers — led by Latinos — to make up more than 40% of the home improvement category by 2040. “We see the Hispanic market and the Latino community as a huge growth opportunity for The Home Depot,” she said.

 

For Orange Apron, sports marketing in general has also been an opportunity to drive deeper partnerships with supplier partners through big cultural moments. The company has done College Game Day partnerships over the years as well as deals with MLS, the U.S. men’s national soccer team, March Madness and NCAA, Dominie said. “We’re talking about partnerships that extend beyond our traditional media, whether it be digital or linear, to real, grassroots fan engagement opportunities.”

 

Orange Apron’s involvement in the World Cup has included in-person events and in-store activations, primarily featuring the paint brand Behr and the power tools manufacturer Makita. Centering its activations around just a couple of brands has allowed Orange Apron to co-create more interactive and tailored experiences, Dominie said.

 

The Home Depot has hosted interactive houses called “Beckham’s Backyard” at official FIFA Fan Festivals that featured Behr and Makita, allowing them to have a presence at official FIFA events in cities such as Atlanta without being official FIFA sponsors. The activations are named after former soccer player and club owner David Beckham, who also has appeared in national commercials and digital content for The Home Depot during the World Cup.

 

The activations included a Behr-sponsored digital target-practice game where fans kicked soccer balls, as well as a Makita-hosted station where guests could decorate paper fans, according to Sports Business Journal.

 

The retailer also collaborated with soccer media network Men In Blazers on a bus that doubles as a studio for Men In Blazers. It has been traveling to World Cup host cities, with signage featuring Behr and Makita. In stores, The Home Depot offered a custom FIFA scarf to customers who bought certain Makita power tools. Outside of the advertising business, on the enterprise level, The Home Depot was doing in-store integrations around the World Cup with sweepstakes components and ticket giveaway opportunities.

 

“We really went into this knowing that we wanted an integrated, fully omnichannel experience that we were creating for our customers and in partnership with our brands,” Dominie said.

 

The Home Depot is also having a bus going around to different cities in the U.S. for watch parties where fans and pro customers can participate in events such as T-shirt giveaways and cornhole tournaments, also presented by Behr and Makita. “We want it to be more fun, because it’s a watch party, essentially, but still an opportunity for Behr to engage their top pros, engage the traditional DIY fan base, and talk about what makes Behr and Makita special and relevant — and do it in kind of a fun way, with giveaways and some engaging activities during those fan fests.”

 

Dominie said The Home Depot has not yet measured the success of the World Cup partnerships, as it is still ongoing, but plans to look at brand lift and purchase intent. She added, however, that the company has found co-branded sports sponsorship programs can increase purchase intent by as much as 40%.

 

“It’s truly a partnership where we align on common goals, and we co-create opportunities to create value for our customers and [clients’] customers, and create meaningful moments that are unique to what only we can do together,” Dominie said. “It goes beyond sponsorship, and it’s about partnership.”

 

Andrew Lipsman, a retail media industry analyst at Media, Ads + Commerce, said that because advertising has moved toward digital performance media, it can be easy to forget that good advertising works through cultural relevance and high-quality content reaching wide audiences — such as through experiential marketing and national TV advertising.

 

“When you can reach the right audiences … and show that there is that alignment around common events or common cultural moments, it creates brand affinity,” Lipsman said. “That brand affinity doesn’t have to translate into a sale at the store at that moment; it just makes you slightly more inclined to visit that store and slightly more inclined to purchase a brand over time.”

 

Ace Hardware has also found that a high share of its customers are interested in sports such as soccer and baseball, according to Tyler Lusebrink, head of brand partnerships at RedVest Media, Ace Hardware’s retail media division that launched last year.

 

“Our focus generally has been: How can we partner with our brand partners to really take advantage of capturing some of that engagement from customers during this big cultural moment?” Lusebrink said. Brands wanting to take advantage of the World Cup are executing full-funnel campaigns with “a heavy lean into off-site programmatic, broad awareness-type tactics that can engage with customers throughout their journey,” he added.

 

These aren’t necessarily campaigns with creative themed around the World Cup — Ace Hardware is not an official sponsor — but they may amplify national messaging that brands are already pushing to reach customers who may be watching the World Cup and related content. ACE Hardware has a media partnership with Epsilon to deploy assets across websites across the web.

 

“We see the World Cup in cultural moments like this as an opportunity for brands to engage with the customer directly in a high-intent mindset,” Lusebrink said. “They’re online, they’re doing research, they’re looking at game recaps and highlights, and brands know that they can get in front of consumers and engage with them to drive them into their brand.”

Saturday, July 11, 2026

17534: FYI ICYMI IPA BS.

More About Advertising spotlighted a survey from the Institute of Practitioners in Advertising (IPA) showing clients want White advertising agencies to “stretch, grow, and challenge” them.

 

Yeah, right. Regardless of anything the collected data might claim, here’s a clear interpretation of the client requests based on reality:

 

STRETCH insufficient budgets

 

GROW timelines via scope creep

 

CHALLENGE assumptions and briefs—but execute to assumptions and briefs anyway

 

Clients want agencies to ‘stretch, grow and challenge’ them says IPA

 

By Emma Hall

 

The IPA has got some advice for agencies about what clients value from agencies, and it doesn’t seem to be a “core creative idea,” which was joint 10th on the list with 73% saying it’s important. AI, however, is right at the top, with 90% of marketers saying AI skills are either critical or very important in both creative and media agencies.

 

Out of 200 clients surveyed, 83% want “stretch and growth thinking,” but only 48% think agencies are delivering it. There was also a gap between the clients who wanted to have their briefs and assumptions challenged (77%) and the 43% who said their agencies dare to do this.

 

What else are marketers looking for? These clients were not admitting to prioritising faster and cheaper; instead say they want strategic expertise (80%), quality production (83%) and specialist knowledge of key channels (79%). Conversely the growth of in-housing is, they said, about cost, speed, control and integration.

 

When it comes to remuneration, agencies will be pleased to hear that two thirds of clients think they are undervaluing themselves. The top preferred alternative (at 54%) is an outcome-based model – one that agencies have long been calling for but find it hard to put into practice. Clients (82%) also want agencies to help them “get the customer heard at board level” which is quite an ask.

 

The study (with Tracksuit) surveyed clients in charge of marketing budgets of between £1m and £250m. There are five recommendations for agencies:

 

1. Create better stories to reframe agency value

 

2. Promote the power of creative expertise

 

3. Package and promote critical thinking

 

4. Influence board level decision making

 

5. Orientate the agency and refocus remuneration around that value

 

Marcos Angelides, chair of the IPA commercial leadership group and Publicis Media’s MD of L’Oréal Lab & head of AI, said: “Clients want agencies to push their thinking further, challenge assumptions and bring new perspectives to the table. To do that effectively, agencies need to combine creativity and expertise with robust data and insight that guarantees competitive advantage.”

 

Ed Palmer, IPA director of value, says: “Agencies should take heart in the value marketers attach to the creativity, challenge and strategic rigour that agencies are uniquely placed to deliver. But there’s work to be done to ensure that agencies deliver what clients truly value in them, and that that value is recognised and compensated accordingly.”