Khaleej Times

WPP to splash £300M to reboot ad group

- Kate Holton

3,500 Jobs will be made redundant as part of restructur­ing

london — WPP will invest to hire new creative staff and reduce costs by cutting offices and jobs under a plan by new boss Mark Read to steer the world’s biggest advertisin­g group back to growth.

A company veteran who replaced founder Martin Sorrell during a period of turmoil earlier this year, Read set out his vision after a loss of key clients lead to several profit warnings and a 40 per cent slump in its market value.

Read said trading had improved slightly in the fourth quarter, clients remained supportive and the dividend would be maintained. WPP will spend £300 million over 3 years to restructur­e and cut costs of £275 million a year by 2021.

Up to 3,500 jobs will go, while it will hire around 1,000 more to improve its senior leadership in its New York agencies on Madison Avenue. The company, which employs 130,000 people, will also roll out its most successful technologi­es across the whole group to help clients.

“We need a simpler WPP, we need to invest in the future,” Read said. “WPP has become too unwieldy, with too much duplicatio­n. It is not always as focused or as fleet of foot as it needs to be to satisfy the needs of all our clients around the globe.”

WPP shares were up 5 per cent at 1010 GMT, giving it a market value of £10.8 billion.

Analysts largely welcomed the plan but Ian Whittaker at Liberum questioned whether WPP could have gone further by cutting the dividend and slimming down more to protect margins.

A target to return to the low single-digit revenue growth rates of peers Omnicom, Publicis and IPG by 2021 indicated it will not get to those levels before then.

WPP said full-year organic net sales were set to fall 0.5 per cent this year, compared with an October forecast of down 1 per cent, and it warned that recent account losses from the likes of Ford would provide ‘headwinds’ in the first half of 2019.

Read has been forced to act after the group hit the buffers in recent years.

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