
Advertising
Age spotlighted Obsidianworks, the enterprise co-founded by A-list actor
Michael B. Jordan and former Nike executive Chad Easterling.
The firm is restating
its position with a “New Money America” platform.
The Ad Age content
is definitely worth reading.
Michael B.
Jordan’s agency regains its independence—behind Obsidianworks’ bet on ‘New
Money America’
By Brian
Bonilla
Obsidianworks,
the agency co-founded by actor Michael B. Jordan and former Nike executive Chad
Easterling, is going fully independent by buying back the minority stake
previously owned by WME Group’s 160over90 since 2021.
The move is
intended to help Obsidianworks grow faster and more deliberately, according to
Easterling, who serves as the agency’s CEO. Part of that growth plan is
Obsidianworks reframing its positioning to embrace what it calls “New Money
America,” which Easterling describes as younger, more diverse and culturally
fluid generation that is driving the largest wealth transfer in history.
The agency
launched in 2019 and took on investment from 160over90 in 2021. At the time,
reports said the investment was worth about $20 million.
Easterling
declined to comment on the figure or disclose the financial terms of the
buyback. The decision to regain full ownership was not the result of a failed
partnership but rather the next phase of a plan that had been in place since
the beginning, he added.
“When we
entered the partnership, going independent was always part of the plan as
well,” Easterling said. “For us and for them, it was really about wanting to
help us get established—help us get the fundamentals and structure in place.”
160over90
wasn’t immediately available for comment.
Michael B.
Jordan is also currently managed by WME, which is part of WME Group.
Obsidianworks’
origins
Obsidianworks
was founded on the belief that the traditional agency model needed to evolve.
“Mike saw an
opportunity from his side as an actor—working with studios and production
companies that were asking him about connecting with consumers—and as a brand
ambassador working with brands and trying to connect to consumers,” Easterling
said.
From the start,
the founders wanted to build a company that could scale beyond Jordan’s
personal network.
“We didn’t want
this to be where he’s trying to walk us into every single door, and he feels
that pressure,” Easterling said.
That ambition
is what made the partnership with 160over90 appealing. The relationship gave
Obsidianworks infrastructure, credibility and the ability to operate like a
more established agency early in its life.
One notable
project produced alongside 160over90 was the creation of the Legacy Classic, a
televised HBCU men’s basketball showcase held in Newark, New Jersey. Easterling
said that led to work with Marriott, along with projects the companies
collaborated on for Meta and Nike.
“The
partnership allowed us to have a level of structure and foundation that let us
not only get after one or two projects as a small, nimble shop, but get after
multiple bodies of work that overlapped at the same time,” he said.
Why
independence feels right now
After five
years of building the business and establishing a roster of clients with
support from 160over90, Easterling believes the agency has proven its model and
can now expand more freely.
“Now feels like
the right time because we want to begin to move faster, take more risks and
define our own growth trajectory without constraints,” he said.
That expansion
is tied closely to Obsidianworks’ focus on “New Money America.”
“They’re not
niche,” Easterling said of this consumer group. “They are the growth engine
many brands are trying to get to, but not recognizing.”
Easterling said
the concept reflects both research and real-world observation. It includes
consumers whose financial realities may not always appear in traditional income
metrics—people with full-time jobs who also generate income through side
businesses or entrepreneurial ventures.
“We’re not just
talking about Black consumers or multicultural consumers—we’re talking about
that entire demographic across every background and nationality,” he said.
“They’re bringing about the largest transfer of wealth, and they operate
differently than millennials and Gen X.”
According to
Easterling, this audience is more entrepreneurial, digitally native and fluid
in how it defines status, success and spending.
Beyond the
‘multicultural’ label
That
perspective also shapes how Obsidianworks positions itself within the agency
landscape.
Easterling
acknowledged that when the agency launched, many conversations around it
centered on multicultural marketing and inclusive work. But he said the agency
never deliberately positioned itself as a multicultural shop. At that time, he
argued, many multicultural agencies were still using “outdated” approaches to
reach diverse audiences.
Obsidianworks,
he said, aims to sit between those two worlds.
“Yes, any call
we go on, people know we’re multicultural—we have that authority,” Easterling
said. However, he said, that label alone shouldn’t define the business. “We
were never here to be diversity consultants.”
Instead,
Easterling often frames the company more broadly as an agency or enterprise
built to help brands grow.
“Typically I
say we’re an agency—or I say we’re an enterprise,” he said, sometimes joking
that “we’re a construction company for brands and New Money America—we’re
builders.”
Obsidianworks’
growth and clients
Some of
Obsidianworks’ work already reflects that positioning. Easterling pointed to
the Legacy Classic as an early example of the agency’s New Money America
thesis. The event connected with HBCU communities through basketball while
introducing those schools and experiences to audiences outside their
traditional geographic centers.
“We did it in
Newark, New Jersey, because it’s easy to do things where HBCUs are, in the
South,” Easterling said. “We wanted to bring this to a new audience—introducing
and educating a new audience about HBCUs and introducing them to that
experience.”
The event also
aimed to generate economic activity for Newark and bring national attention to
the city.
Today,
Obsidianworks’ client roster includes Nike, Converse, Jordan Brand, Meta,
Target and Spanx. The agency currently employs about 20 full-time staffers and
plans to add another 10 to 12 people during the first half of the year.
Despite a
broader pullback in investment toward diverse-owned agencies, Easterling said
the company has maintained strong client relationships.
“I’d be crazy
to say there wasn’t a shift—absolutely there was,” he said. Even so, he added,
“the demand for culturally relevant work that connects to consumers and to
those audiences has never been higher.”
The role of
entertainment
Jordan, who is
up for best actor for “Sinners” at the Oscars this Sunday, remains an important
part of Obsidianworks’ strategic vision, though Easterling emphasized the
agency was never intended to function as a vanity project built solely around
the actor’s career. Still, its connection to entertainment could become more
significant as brands increasingly seek ways to participate in film, TV and
other entertainment properties.
“Before, that
wasn’t the biggest focus for us, even though we could do it,” Easterling said.
“Now it’s more of a focus.”
Obsidianworks’
decision to go independent was not driven by the broader trend toward indie
agencies finding success with clients, Easterling said, though he acknowledged
the advantages the structure can provide. He also didn’t rule out future
M&A opportunities or building capabilities, but said that it isn’t the
agency’s main focus right now.
“Being
independent is a strength and has benefits,” he said. “It allows us to move
quickly and focus on delivering measurable impact for clients without as many
layers.”
Clarification: This story has been updated to
include the current name of WME Group.