Oman Daily Observer

CEO of world’s biggest ad group WPP quits

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LONDON: Martin Sorrell, who built WPP into the world’s biggest advertisin­g agency through 33 years of dealmaking, quit on Saturday after an allegation of personal misconduct.

The departure of the CEO who built a two-man outfit into one of Britain’s biggest companies with 200,000 staff in 112 countries leaves WPP without a boss at a pivotal time for the industry and when the group is under great strain.

WPP stunned the market last week when it said it had appointed lawyers to investigat­e alleged misconduct by Sorrell. He denied the allegation­s but in a letter to WPP staff published late on Saturday he said the “current disruption” was “putting too much unnecessar­y pressure on the business”.

He said he had decided that “in your interest, in the interest of our clients, in the interest of all shareowner­s, both big and small, and in the interest of all our other stakeholde­rs, it is best for me to step aside”.

Chairman Roberto Quarta will become executive chairman until a new chief executive is found, while Mark Read, a WPP digital executive, and Andrew Scott, chief operating officer, Europe, have been appointed as joint chief operating officers.

Read, who previously sat on WPP’S main board, is well regarded in the industry while Scott was involved in its acquisitio­n strategy and was not involved with clients.

 ??  ?? WPP CEO Martin Sorrell addresses delegates at the Federation of British Industry forum in London. — AFP
WPP CEO Martin Sorrell addresses delegates at the Federation of British Industry forum in London. — AFP

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