Advertising Age reported current Sprint CMO Jeff Hallock is bailing out, slated to officially leave the company once his replacement is identified, hopefully by the end of the first quarter of 2015. In typical Sprint ass-backwards fashion, the company is poised to hire Deutsch LA before naming the new White advertising agency’s immediate boss. Sprint should clean up its own act prior to asking an ad shop to rescue the telecom from destruction. Handing Deutsch an organizational chart with “TBD” typed into key spots shows the ignorance of the client—as well as the desperation of the agency. Sprint CEO Marcelo Claure declared his company will present consumers with value, clarity and simplicity. Too bad that offer doesn’t extend to the fresh advertising agency.
Amid Agency Review, Sprint’s CMO Plans to Depart
Jeff Hallock, CMO Since January, Will Leave by the First Quarter of 2015
By Mark Bergen, Malika Toure
Jeff Hallock, the CMO of wireless carrier Sprint, will depart by the end of the first quarter of 2015, the company confirmed on Friday. His planned exit comes amid a major agency review and corporate overhaul under CEO Marcelo Claure, who joined the struggling carrier in August.
Mr. Hallock, a fifteen-year Sprint marketing veteran, was promoted to CMO in January following the resignation of Bill Malloy. He will stay on in the role through March 31, 2015, unless the carrier finds a replacement sooner.
“His departure was voluntary and it was based on a personal decision,” said Dave Mellin, a Sprint spokesman. “He will remain in charge of day to day operations until his replacement is found, which we expect to happen by sometime next year.”
In March, Mr. Hallock initiated a sweeping marketing campaign around the carrier’s “Framily Plan” with Figliulo & Partners, its lead creative agency since November 2013. Shortly after his appointment as CEO, Mr. Claure ditched the “Framily” offering in lieu of a new data plan. On Sept. 2, Mr. Claure launched an agency review.
The “Framily” ad campaign, a serial format centered on oddball characters, received a lukewarm reception from industry creatives, and Mr. Hallock repeatedly defended the campaign as it ran. Mr. Mellin said his departure was not related to the campaign.
A memo late Monday evening and attributed to Mr. Claure described Mr. Hallock’s departure, according to one executive who received the note.
“I want to thank Jeff for all his contributions throughout his Sprint career,” the memo read, the executive said. “He has been a fixture in Sprint marketing and I appreciate all he’s done for the company. A global search is under way to find a replacement, but Jeff will be fully engaged and manage the marketing organization until someone else is hired.”
Sprint declined to comment.
Mr. Claure’s search for a chief marketer will now be added to his ongoing hunt for agencies.
Sprint sent creative agencies a request for proposals on Aug. 29 through Mercer Island Consulting, according to executives familiar with the matter. Finalists in the pitch were Interpublic’s Deutsch L.A. and Havas’ Arnold Worldwide. Arnold was eliminated this week but Deutsch has yet to be declared the winner. While people close to the review have noted Mr. Claure’s desire to work with a larger agency, they have also said Figliulo & Partners remains involved and is likely to continue working with Sprint after a new creative lead is chosen.
Mr. Mellin declined to comment on the agency review.
In 2013, Sprint spent $1.56 billion in U.S. advertising, according to the Ad Age DataCenter. Sprint currently commands 15% of the U.S. wireless market, trailing larger spenders such as Verizon, with 33%, and AT&T, with 28%, according to ComScore. Sprint is also confronting a credible challenge from T-Mobile, which added 2.3 million customers during the third quarter.
Sprint has shed customers recently amid a costly network upgrade—it lost 500,000 subscribers in its most recent quarter, when it reported a loss of $192 million. The carrier also announced it had moved to lay off 2,000 from its workforce.
On the earnings calls, Mr. Claure told investors to expect Sprint to be “very aggressive” in its advertising moving forward.
Contributing: Maureen Morrison
Here's how it works inside the agency. A couple months before an agency wins one of these phone (or Army, or Navy, or federal whatever accounts) they suddenly open a Latin or urban or "pancultural" WTF that means division. Press releases, the whole thang. That's how you know they're bidding on something big.
ReplyDeleteAn agency with zero POC working there gains expertise in minorities overnight, if you believe the press.
Then they play that up during the pitch. They win the pitch, because they can show how connected to minorities they are, (they got a new division just for that, see? Here's some press releases showing it.) tick off some government boxes, and make bank.
Once the ink is dry on the contract, they quietly phase out the ethnic division. Usually takes about a year. Oh, they'll put their names on a couple of things they let them translate into Korean or Spanish or stick some hip hop music in or whatever, but they ain't going anywhere professionally. It's biz as usual behind the scenes.
Don't forget my favorite, the Holding Company Shuffle.
ReplyDeleteThat's where one of the biggies signs some inconsequential LGBT or black or Asian or Hispanic public relations firm, sometimes some tiny agency, & puts their name on all the paperwork for the F.C.C. & makes it look like they'll be in charge.
Then once they actually get the contract, all the power & money shifts over to the bigger white ad agency under that same holding company umbrella. They call all the shots.