—Global CEO Christian Juhl confirmed the move this week, the latest step in his plan to streamline Group M—
By Beau Jackson
WPP’s GroupM has confirmed its agencies EssenceMediacom, Wavemaker, MSix & Partners, and Mindshare will no longer be responsible for their own budgets as of 2024.
Though GroupM has always operated a country-level profit and loss model, the change will be the first time budgets and resources are allocated solely on a country-by-country basis.
Global chief executive Christian Juhl revealed the news, the latest step in his plan for GroupM’s restructure, in an interview with Business Insider this week.
Agency heads, he said, will retain responsibility for client growth and profitability, but will now have more time to focus on strategy and create efficiencies across the group.
Since taking over as CEO in October 2019, Juhl has been working to streamline the way GroupM operates in a bid to make it “more like a software company,” where technology is centralized so individual agencies have better access to it.
The restructure so far has included the creation of EssenceMediacom, and the reorganization of GroupM’s global performance marketing division, Nexus, into two groups, (expert practices and media solutions) to better support the client-facing agencies.
As part of the shake-up at Nexus, it also moved product and engineering teams into its data arm, Choreograph.
GroupM’s restructure follows a similar restructuring process at rival agency Publicis Groupe, which has also moved to a model in which the UK serves as a platform for divisions across Europe.
In October Niel Bornman, former CEO of GroupM Nexus in EMEA, was appointed chief executive of Publicis Media UK and chief product and solutions officer for Publicis Groupe EMEA—a new, combined role for the group.
More details about the simplification of GroupM are expected to be announced at its Capital Markets Day in January 2024.
GroupM declined Campaign’s request for comment at this time.
In October, WPP reported a decline in revenues in Q3 and downgraded its annual revenue forecast for the second quarter in a row. At the time, it said it is planning to make back £100m in savings by 2025 through cutting “structural costs and inefficiencies.” Though minimal, job cuts are expected to be part of the plan.
However, Juhl also announced late last month that GroupM’s North America CEO Kirk McDonald will depart by the end of 2023 after three years overseeing the business.
This article originally appeared at Campaign UK.