Friday, July 10, 2026

17533: Thank God It’s French Court Day.

 

MediaPost reported an appeals court in Paris ruled Vincent Bolloré did not control Vivendi when the company split into four separate enterprises. No, Bolloré probably delegated control to his sons and privileged kin.

 

French Court Rules Vivendi Not Controlled By Bollore

 

By Steve McClellan

 

Vincent Bollore dodged a $9 billion-plus bullet earlier this week when an appeals court in Paris ruled that he did not exercise control over media conglomerate Vivendi during the period when the company divided itself into four separate companies. They included a newly independent Havas, now publicly traded on the Euronext Amsterdam Exchange. 

 

The news was reported by several European outlets including Reuters. One investor group, CIAM, said it would appeal to the French Supreme Court, reports indicated. 

 

The issue of Bollore’s control of the company has been the subject of minority shareholder lawsuits and appeals to regulatory bodies since the company split apart in 2024. Each side has won a couple of rounds.  

 

It’s not clear when the legal battle will end, but if it is determined that Bollore did exercise control, French laws would require Bollore Group to make a tender offer for outstanding minority shares of Vivendi and its spin-off companies. Analysts peg the value of that tender at between $9 and $10 billion.  

 

Vivendi issued a statement confirming the Appeals Court decision, saying it “fully confirms” an earlier court analysis that Bollore did not control the company. Bollore did not issue a comment.

Thursday, July 09, 2026

17532: On Exclusivity, The Omnicom Inclusion Breakfast, And Less.

 

Reflecting Adland, Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity displayed declining DEIBA+ dedication.

 

The Omnicom Inclusion Breakfast was an exclusive affair with registration-only admission. Social media posts feature performative propaganda starring equality advocates—a literal minority group—spouting clichéd cultural commentary.

 

The DEIBA+ conversation has not evolved at all, pushing political and professional platforms that have proven ineffective.

 

PRovoke Media Editorial Director Maja Pawinska Sims provided the following perspective:

 

The conversations that became quieter

Sometimes the biggest story at Cannes is what nobody is talking about. Only a few years ago, DEI and sustainability were impossible to avoid. This year, both were noticeably less prominent across the official programme and the wider festival.

That doesn’t mean those issues have disappeared, nor that organisations have stopped caring about them. But the centre of gravity has undoubtedly shifted, which made spaces such as Propeller’s Empower Lounge feel all the more valuable. Away from some of the louder conversations around AI and commercial transformation, it continued to provide a platform for thoughtful discussions about inclusion, leadership, wellbeing and the broader purpose of communications.

It was also encouraging to see The Female Quotient expand onto the beachfront for the first time, although many delegates lamented the disappearance of Inkwell Beach, and of course the immensely popular IPG Women’s Breakfast/Diversity Breakfast, is no more after the Omnicom acquisition. 

 

If DEIBA+ were an awards category, Cannes Lions could not legitimately identify a single winner, as any submitted work would constitute a scam entry.

Wednesday, July 08, 2026

17531: On Solving WPP Enterprise Solutions.

 

More About Advertising wondered about WPP Enterprise Solutions, a unit in the global flaming dumpster, newly launched with self-promotional hype full of technobabble and straight-up bullshit.

 

Much of the pitch appears to be lifted from recent Harvard Business Review articles. Is it AI-generated content or blatant plagiarism?

 

Clients should avoid seeking solutions from an enterprise seemingly incapable of solving its own problems—or clearly articulating its offerings, benefits, and value in original style.

 

That’s Advertising 101. Ask anyone at WPP White advertising agency Ogilvy, named Network of the Year at Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

 

Just saying.

 

WPP launches Enterprise Solutions – in Nerdish

 

By MAA Staff

 

WPP is launching its new Enterprise Solutions suite, one of the pillars of Cindy Rose’s new WPP. At least that’s what we think it is. One thing we’re learning about techies is that they protect their cult with a private language which only they understand and which excludes most of us.

 

This is what Enterprise Solutions does (is the nomenclature like water solutions for plumbers?)

 

AI Transformation Consulting – Helping organisations realise AI value through strategic advisory, architecture and agentic systems.


Agentic Commerce – Converting brand equity and product truth into machine-readable signals that shape how AI agents discover, evaluate and recommend brands.


Owned Intelligence – Converting client-owned data into strategic, AI-ready competitive assets that fuel brand-specific and commercially-attributable results.


Adaptive, Real-time Relationships – Pairing first-party data with AI to anticipate and personalise every interaction, deepening loyalty and growing lifetime value.


Intelligent Content – A closed-loop operating system that plans, produces and activates content using intelligent automation.

 

Does anyone know what, if anything this means? Translator please.

Tuesday, July 07, 2026

17530: How Coke Can Differentiate Publicis Groupe And WPP.

Digiday opined on The Coca-Cola Company’s global media, data, and technology review staging a Publicis Groupe versus WPP faceoff.

 

In Digiday’s perspective, it will boil down to Coke choosing a White holding company or single White operating company for their respective positions regarding data.

 

If the decision is focused instead on performance and trust, Publicis Groupe has the advantage, based on its self-promotional hype.

 

As for global flaming dumpster WPP, well

 

Besides, there’s plenty of data to prove awarding the business will be determined by which contender best appeases the client with exaggerated promises, lavish presents, and underhanded proposals.

 

‘One of our core areas’: Ahead of global agency review, Coca-Cola’s CFO focuses on data matching

 

By Seb Joseph

 

One of Coca-Cola’s core focuses these days is data — specifically how it matches its own data against what its partners hold.

 

John Murphy, the advertiser’s president and CFO, made the point at the DBAccess Global Consumer Conference on Thursday. 

 

He added: “Today, one of our core areas, how do we take the, let’s say, first-party data that we own — it’s proprietary, it’s ours — and how do we marry that with the customer data that these proprietors who are bottlers, given the amount of engagement they have with millions of customers every day. Or how do we work with some of our partners, whether it’s in the U.S. with Publicis or WPP in other parts of the world, to bring that together and then to create a sort of a new intelligence.” 

 

While it’s hardly a fresh observation, it is a timely one. Coca-Cola is about to kick off a global agency review covering media, data and technology, triggering a tussle between Publicis Groupe and WPP, as Ad Age first reported. It will exclude North America, where the advertiser already works with Publicis as well as Japen and Korea where it works with Dentsu, the company said in an emailed statement. Moreover, it will not include global creative and PR disciplines, which will remain with WPP.

 

The review, which is being managed by Mediasense, will begin in July, with the decision expected to be announced in the fall. When it lands, it will settle (at least for now) which of the two prevailing holdco views on data a major advertiser buys into. Publicis has spent years building a proprietary data stack across Epsilon, Lotame, LiveRamp and its CoreAI operating system, and will no doubt pitch itself as a tech company that also does media. WPP, on the other hand, will do the opposite. Rather than owning the data, it acquired InfoSum to connect data sources across the ecosystem without centralizing them, a privacy-safe collaboration model it has since folded into GroupM and WPP Open. 

 

Put another way, one holdco bets on owning the database, the other on owning the connective tissue. The Coca-Cola review therefore is about as direct a test of those two philosophies as it gets, and one of the more consequential. A Publicis win would be a timely endorsement of its data stack bet, arriving just as it moves to close the LiveRamp acquisition. A WPP win would be a crucial jolt for a holdco that has been searching for consistent momentum after sluggish growth and too many false dawns.

 

“The Coca-Cola Company is evolving its digital-first marketing operating system for future growth,” reads its statement on the matter. “This includes a shift in mindset from traditional media planning to the emerging ways we need to reach consumers through technology, including agentic tools.”

 

Whatever it signals about the holdco model, the review could just as easily expose the trap both companies risk walking into. They’ll lead with AI and data because that’s what clients want to hear. But turning combined first-party data into something that actually drives decisions is ultimately a people problem as much as a technology one. The hard question is whether either agency will have the senior talent capable of interpreting what the tools produce.

 

“To unlock real value from AI, you’ve got to use your own data as a base,” said Robert Webster, founder of AI marketing consultancy TAU. “The real battleground is how you show Coca-Cola how your data, your approach and the AI it plugs into actually matters. Publicis has won a lot of business in Europe, but has been — in my opinion — less AI-focused than perception might suggest. WPP, meanwhile, has very much focused on larger clients, with EssenceMediacom particularly strong on CPG, which again is relevant here. On Europe and the U.K. I’d give WPP a slight edge, on Asia definitely Publicis. But crucially, what a client really wants is to make sure they own their data and their method to execute against it — and neither of them properly delivers that yet. On data ownership, LiveRamp gets Publicis closer.”

 

That’s the real issue for the largest companies. A Bain & Company survey of 951 companies found the top reason AI programs underperform is that companies still can’t reliably reach their own data after a decade and hundreds of billions spent on modernisation. MIT found the same wall from a different angle: 95% of corporate GenAI pilots stalled, mostly on tools that integrate badly. Through that lens the Coca-Cola review becomes a test of which holdco can actually solve a plumbing problem most enterprises haven’t cracked. 

 

“For advertisers there are valid reasons to want an agency plugged deep into their data to do AI work, but they also need to keep architectural sovereignty and the freedom to switch,” said Tim Norris-Wiles, head of go-to-market at data startup Neuralift AI. “Those goals are at odds. It gets harder still for any brand running a single global architecture but with different agencies across markets, where every integration is also a dependency they have to maintain and be able to unwind. The holdcos that win long-term therefore won’t be the ones that lock clients in hard, they’ll be the ones that can deliver value while leaving the client’s architecture portable.”

Monday, July 06, 2026

17529: On Trust, Distrust, And Mistrust At WPP.


More About Advertising spotlighted troubles at WPP Media, including:

 

• The former head of WPP’s media operation in China received a life imprisonment sentence for charges stemming from a $176 million scam—and two others were also hit with stiff sentences.

 

• The former head of a GroupM division in New York City filed a ‘whistleblower’ lawsuit, charging he was fired for raising red flags that WPP’s trading division illegally retained profits that should have been passed back to clients.

 

Additionally, there’s a class-action lawsuit filed by shareholders charging WPP with deceptively sugarcoating profits last year.

 

It all makes for bad optics, especially given the single White operating company is restructuring itself as a media-first enterprise.

 

WPP CEO Cindy Rose declared, “We want to be a trusted growth partner for our clients in the era of AI.”

 

The corporate website proclaims, “WPP Is The Trusted Growth Partner For The World’s Leading Brands.”

 

Okay, except WPP displays internal distrust. Media is globally viewed with suspicion and concern by clients. And Adland practitioners are consistently rated among the least-trusted professionals.

 

Trust is earned. So is distrust and mistrust.

 

WPP’s China crisis – why is the holding company so accident-prone?

 

By Stephen Foster

 

Any business handling millions, sometimes billions, of other people’s money on ultra-tight margins is open to fraud, indeed it may be tempted to try itself.

 

The former boss of WPP’s media operation (GroupM) in China has been sentenced to life imprisonment, accused of masterminding a $176m scam. Two others have also received stiff sentences. The Chinese judicial system is hardly famed for its transparency but WPP has been careful to distance itself from the three employees. Its business in China, hardly a surprise, has been hammered.

 

That isn’t the only cloud on the horizon though. Over in NYC there’s what’s being termed a $100m ‘whistleblower’ lawsuit from Richard Foster, one-time head of GroupM’s Motion Content Group (whatever that was) alleging that WPP fired him for raising concerns that WPP’s trading division used client spending power to secure cash rebates and volume-based discounts from media owners, illegally retaining profits rather than passing them back to clients. Ring a bell?

 

Also in NYC, there’s a class action by angry shareholders claiming the company failed to appraise them fully of the collapse in profits last summer which, ultimately, led to the departure of CEO Mark Read. Making overly-optimistic noises can be costly.

 

Finally (and there may of course be more) WPP is involved in a long-running dispute in Kenya with the founder and former CEO of WPP Scangroup Bharat Thakrar alleging that WPP, among other things, has been using Scangroup money to prop up the holding company, to the detriment of Scangroup. It’s redolent of other far-flung WPP disputes including its agencies in Australia.

 

Now WPP may deal with all these issues and emerge smelling of roses but they surely affect its ability to trade its way out of current problems. They must be especially galling for all those people at Ogilvy and VML who have just notched up a stellar Cannes Lions, seemingly doing a great job for their clients despite all the noise (and worse) around them.

 

WPP’s biggest problem – in a competitive field – is debt, around £3bn against a total company value of £2.64bn. New CEO Cindy Rose’s first job is to reverse these positions. But it’s hard to see what else she can sell to do it. It’s already sold out of research (Kantar) and PR (FGS Global) without making much of a dent in the debt. That in itself is something of a puzzle.

 

Then there’s what we might politely called proprietary media trading (or broking), the smokey activity behind many of the above issues, including China where media deals seem to have been carved up in a Shanghai poker game. Almost certainly more such cases will emerge, partly because no-one seems to know whether it’s legal or not. The US courts may help us out.

 

This Cannes Lions should be a turning point for WPP. But there’s still a lot of old baggage lurking in the undergrowth.

Sunday, July 05, 2026

17528: When It Comes To DEIBA+ Progress, Adland Networks Do Not Work.

 

During a 2009 heat shield event, former Ogilvy North American Chairman John Siefert admitted Adland was “not exactly leading the way” in DEIBA+ progress.

 

Can’t help but think of Siefert’s admission while viewing the image above featuring Ogilvy celebrating its Network of the Year honor at Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

 

It’s sadly safe to say Adland—via White advertising agencies like Ogilvy—is leading the way in systemic racism.

Saturday, July 04, 2026

17527: Putting The Con In Content.

Contentful helps marketers personalize, optimize, and create standout digital experiences at scale—advertising their services on trade publications like Adweek.

 

Such media placement probably intrigues shitty clients seeking fast and cheap content. Meanwhile, drones at White advertising agencies are undoubtedly annoyed to see Contentful actively stealing their jobs.

 

BTW, the Contentful promotional campaign sucks, seemingly produced by AI—or amateurish hacks.