Wednesday, November 05, 2025

17240: Rose Rhetoric Reads Like, Well, Read.

 

Adweek recently played a WPP doubleheader, pitching more content on the chaotic games at the White holding company.

 

Upon issuing another profit warning—and remarking WPP’s performance was “unacceptable”—WPP CEO Cindy Rose declared, “My ambition for WPP is sky-high, and we are committed to doing the hard work it will take to turn this business around. … We haven’t gone far enough or fast enough in adapting to the evolving needs of our clients. They want our offer to be simpler, more integrated, powered by media, data, and AI, efficiently priced and designed to deliver growth and business outcomes. You can expect us, in our effort to improve our execution, to be focused in those areas. … We’ve got strong foundations, and we’ve got the ingredients we need to succeed, including amazing clients, strong capabilities, world-class talent, and some of the most consequential agency brands in the world. We have unrivaled global scale and reach, market-leading technology, and technology partnerships that really give us a competitive edge, and all of that makes this a very exciting platform for us to build on. … There is a lot to do, and it will take time to see the impact, but in my first 60 days, we are already moving at a pace with some initiatives already announced and more to come. We know what it takes to win: we are optimistic, energized, and confident that we’re building the right plan and the right culture to secure a bright future for WPP, our people, our clients, and our shareholders. We look forward to sharing more details early in the new year.”

 

The Roserrection Plan doesn’t sound much different than former WPP CEO Mark Read’s bullshit—or other White holding companies’ ramblings.

 

Indeed, Rose’s rhetoric could better reflect her alleged ambition by consolidating to read: Simpler, Faster, Cheaper—with proprietary AI too!

 

All four characteristics, incidentally, point to global RIFs.

 

After Issuing Another Profit Warning, WPP CEO Says She Has a Turnaround Plan 

 

Cindy Rose told investors that AI and competitive pricing will be top-of-mind for the holdco as it looks to claw back market share and revive its stock price

 

By Kendra Barnett

 

WPP issued its second profit warning this year on Thursday after reporting worse-than-expected Q3 results.

 

Following her first earnings call at the helm of the advertising giant, new CEO Cindy Rose said WPP’s financial performance “is certainly not where it needs to be” on a call with press Thursday—and she promised a plan to fix it. 

 

“My ambition for WPP is sky-high, and we are committed to doing the hard work it will take to turn this business around,” she said.

 

Key pillars of her roadmap include simplification, competitive pricing, and, of course, AI.

 

“We haven’t gone far enough or fast enough in adapting to the evolving needs of our clients,” Rose told reporters. “They want our offer to be simpler, more integrated, powered by media, data, and AI, efficiently priced and designed to deliver growth and business outcomes. You can expect us, in our effort to improve our execution, to be focused in those areas.” 

 

To revamp the business to meet these demands, focus areas in the coming months will include client acquisition and retention, strengthening the go-to-market strategy, and optimizing WPP’s org chart while “building a high performance team culture,” Rose said. 

 

The company is also evaluating ways to expand its addressable market through the potential integration or development of additional enterprise tech solutions, though Rose declined to go into specifics. 

 

The former Microsoft exec took the reins at the British advertising behemoth last month, with Mark Read exiting after a tumultuous seven-year stint in the role. 

 

WPP has suffered hit after hit this year, with investors losing confidence amid a messy reorg of its media division, AI acceleration challenges, and a spate of high-profile client departures—with both Coca-Cola and Mars migrating their media accounts to French rival Publicis.

 

Rose has hit the ground running in her first two months in the role. She’s overseen a leadership reshuffle and inked a deal with Google that includes a $400 million pledge from WPP to integrate the tech giant’s advanced AI tools into WPP Open, its AI marketing platform. Last week, WPP launched a self-serve version of WPP Open to court dollars from small businesses and performance marketers. 

 

The company expects WPP Open Pro, and WPP Open more broadly, to drive much-needed revenue. Rose views the platform’s underlying common data model as a key differentiator among agency AI solutions, noting that it helps clients “optimize their entire marketing investment across the entire marketing function.”

 

Of these recent developments, Rose said: “These are all bold and decisive moves that hopefully give you a sense of our direction of travel, and you can certainly expect more of the same from us in the months ahead.”

 

“We need to go farther and we need to go faster,” she added.

 

As WPP pours resources into its AI programs, another priority will be to revitalize WPP Media, rebranded earlier this year from GroupM. In Rose’s view: “GroupM lost its way, but I’m very confident in [CEO] Brian [Lesser]’s vision of an open and privacy-compliant data- and AI-powered ecosystem.”

 

The media buyer saw signs of growth in Q3, snagging new business from Mastercard, logistics titan Maersk, and retailer Marks & Spencer.

 

WPP said it will share a more comprehensive strategy plan publicly in the coming year. 

 

Despite its financial woes, Rose signaled confidence in the firm’s direction.

 

“We’ve got strong foundations, and we’ve got the ingredients we need to succeed, including amazing clients, strong capabilities, world-class talent, and some of the most consequential agency brands in the world,” she said. “We have unrivaled global scale and reach, market-leading technology and technology partnerships that really give us a competitive edge, and all of that makes this a very exciting platform for us to build on.”

 

:::::

 

WPP CEO Cindy Rose Calls Performance ‘Unacceptable’ as Full-Year Outlook Slumps 

 

The new boss is ‘moving at pace’ to get the holdco back on track

 

By Rebecca Stewart

 

The numbers

 

8.4% – revenue decline for the quarter, down 3.5% year-on-year on a like-for-like basis

 

11.1% decline in revenue less-pass-through costs down overall and 5.9% on a like-for-like basis

 

5.5 – 6.0% – How much WPP now expects revenue, less pass-through costs, to decline in 2025. This is a drop from its previous forecast, which predicted a decline between 3 to 5%.

 

$4.3 billion (£3.25 billion) – revenue less-pass-through costs for the quarter.

 

Watercooler talk

 

WPP has reported its first earnings under the leadership of new chief executive (CEO) Cindy Rose, who has launched a strategic review aimed at helping the embattled holdco return to growth.

 

As revenue dropped 8.4%, the business has downgraded its full-year guidance for the second time this year, issuing a fresh profit warning.

 

In her first public statement to investors and journalists, Rose said WPP’s performance was “unacceptable.”

 

She said the business was taking action to improve this, including making investments in AI and simplifying its operational structure.

 

Former Microsoft exec Rose took over from longtime WPP boss Mark Read in September.

 

The business has faced a challenging first half of the year thanks to client losses on the media side, including Mars, which it lost to French rival Publicis Groupe. Before Rose joined, it also undertook a restructuring of its WPP Media division, which resulted in significant layoffs.

 

Revenues at WPP Media were down 5.7%, while the North America market, which is about to face even stiffer competition as Omnicom Group prepares to close its acquisition of IPG, dropped 6%.

 

In her first two months as CEO, Rose has focused on building up WPP’s AI arsenal, including inking a $400 million deal with Google and launching WPP Open Pro, an AI platform marketers can use to build campaigns, develop creative assets, and activate on their own.

 

Key quote

 

“There is a lot to do, and it will take time to see the impact, but in my first 60 days, we are already moving at a pace with some initiatives already announced and more to come,” said Rose.

 

“We know what it takes to win: we are optimistic, energized, and confident that we’re building the right plan and the right culture to secure a bright future for WPP, our people, our clients, and our shareholders. We look forward to sharing more details early in the new year.”

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