Friday, August 08, 2025

17149: WPP Failing & Falling Further Fast.

 

Adweek reported WPP suffered significant drops in shares, revenue, operating profit, and headcount—the latter resulting from dropping 7000 bodies in the past year.

 

The White holding company also announced incoming CEO Cindy Rose will spearhead a strategic review.

 

Strategic review?! Rose has served on the WPP board—albeit in a non-executive director role—since 2019. Surely, she’s familiar with the current corporate strategy; and hopefully, she offered specific strategic solutions to secure the top job.

 

Then again, Rose might discover a lack of strategy, compounded by a flimsy concept and poor execution.

 

Weakness in strategy, concept, and execution typically leads to total failure.

 

An enterprise purporting to be a leader in Adland should know this.

 

WPP Revenues Drop 5.8% as It Announces Strategic Review 

 

Incoming CEO Cindy Rose will review the embattled company's strategy when she takes over in September

 

By Brittaney Kiefer

 

WPP’s shares plunged by nearly 5% on Thursday morning, hitting a 16-year low, after it announced more disappointing financial results and a strategic review under incoming chief executive (CEO) Cindy Rose.

 

The numbers

 

4.3% – decline in revenue less pass-through costs for the first half of 2025, with total revenues reaching $6.7 billion (£5.03 billion).

 

5.8% – decline in revenue less pass-through costs for Q2 2025, reaching $3.3 billion (£2.5 billion).

 

47.8% – decline in operating profit for the first half of 2025 to $295.5 million (£221 million). 

 

7,000 – reduction in headcount over the past year.

 

Watercooler talk

 

The beleaguered holding company, which owns agencies including Ogilvy and VML, halved its dividend and said Rose, who will succeed outgoing CEO Mark Read on Sept. 1, will review the company’s strategy.  

 

WPP revealed that it had cut costs over the period. That included reducing its global workforce to 104,000 from 111,000 a year ago; slashing staff incentives by 60% to $78.8 million (£59 million); and decreasing its freelancer budget by 13% in the last year.

 

This was Read’s last earnings report after WPP appointed Rose, a former Microsoft executive, to the top job last month. The group has been hit by client losses from brands such as Mars, layoffs, restructuring, and a rocky rollout of its return-to-office mandate. 

 

However, Read said the company had made “significant progress” on repositioning WPP Media (the new brand for its media agencies that it revealed earlier this year), simplifying its organization, and reducing costs. It also acquired data collaboration platform InfoSum to enhance its AI and data capabilities, and has been investing in AI through platforms like WPP Open. 

 

Key quote 

 

Read bid farewell after seven years at the helm of WPP. 

 

“WPP is a company with enormous strengths in creativity and media, technology and AI, talented people, deep client relationships, and unmatched global reach,” he said.

 

“Throughout my seven years as CEO, technological innovation has been a constant, and I believe that thanks to our investment in AI, we can look to the future with confidence.” 

 

“I would like to thank our clients for their partnership and our people for their dedication, and I wish them, and Cindy, every success in the future.”

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