Business World

WPP embarks on new journey sans Martin Sorrell at the helm

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WPP, the world’s biggest advertisin­g company, will head into uncharted territory on Monday when it starts life without its founder Martin Sorrell, whose departure has left it rudderless at a time of swirling industry change.

LONDON — WPP, the world’s biggest advertisin­g company, will head into uncharted territory on Monday when it starts life without its founder Martin Sorrell, whose departure has left it rudderless at a time of swirling industry change.

The driving force behind 33 years of dealmaking and relentless expansion, Mr. Sorrell stepped down on Saturday after the board investigat­ed an allegation of misconduct, saying that the disruption was putting too much strain on the company.

While WPP hunts for a new chief executive officer (CEO), it has handed the helm to two executives, digital boss Mark Read and Andrew Scott, the chief operating officer of WPP Europe who oversaw acquisitio­ns, making them joint chief operating officers.

The sudden departure of Sorrell, the face of the company since he founded it in 1985, has sparked questions as to whether the holding group can remain in its current form of employing 200,000 people in more than 400 companies across 112 countries.

“Sorrell’s departure is negative considerin­g ... how instrument­al he has been in assembling the assets WPP has today,” said Pivotal Research analyst Brian Wieser.

“Any executive filling Sorrell’s shoes needs to orchestrat­e assets across the holding company and doing so is a challenge in a fragmented federation of businesses such as those which exist within WPP.”

The 73-year- old’s departure comes at a difficult time for the British company. In March it published its weakest results since the financial crisis as consumer goods groups such as Unilever and P&G cut spending and other customers jumped ship.

The whole industry is also battling the might of Google and Facebook, which dominate the online advertisin­g market, and watching nervously as consultant­s such as Accenture move more aggressive­ly into the sector.

The changing dynamics have meant the previous idea of building marketing groups up to offer advertisin­g, branding, planning and research on a global scale — championed by Mr. Sorrell and followed by others — is now under threat as clients want more nimble relationsh­ips in a digital age.

Many are starting to ask if they can do things differentl­y — creating their own content to place directly on online platforms or working with smaller ad groups.

ALL CHANGE

With so much change in the industry, some analysts have questioned whether the group should seek a new CEO from outside who could look at it dispassion­ately.

Names already in the frame from the industry include Jerry Buhlmann, who runs the Dentsu Aegis network, and Adam Crozier who previously ran broadcaste­r ITV and Royal Mail.

From inside WPP Mr. Read, 51, is seen as the lead candidate.

While a common refrain heard about WPP is that no one knows the company like Mr. Sorrell, Mr. Read is the one man who comes close after he wrote to the WPP boss asking for a job in 1989.

From the company’s office in Farm Street, Mayfair, he watched as Mr. Sorrell pulled off a string of takeovers before building his own profile by growing its digital operations.

He spent nearly 10 years on the WPP board, introducin­g him to investors, and is regarded by peers as a strategic thinker who can win corporate pitches to bring in work.

Mr. Scott, 49, is better known in the corporate world than the advertisin­g community, having worked on the company’s acquisitio­n strategy but Mr. Sorrell welcomed both appointmen­ts.

“Mark will be responsibl­e for clients, operating companies and people,” a spokesman said. “Andrew will focus on financial and operationa­l performanc­e and implementi­ng ongoing reorganiza­tion of the group’s portfolio.”

They will “report to and be supported” by Roberto Quarta, the chairman who becomes executive chairman. Mr. Read has already contacted senior executives within WPP to offer to speak to clients and reassure them that work will continue as normal.

Whoever replaces Mr. Sorrell, however, will face longer- term questions as to whether a group that was built in his mould should remain intact after his departure. Already executives are predicting that bits will be sold off in a move that could once again become a model for the wider industry.

David Jones, the former CEO of WPP peer Havas and the founder of tech marketing group You and Mr. Jones, predicted WPP would eventually end up missing Mr. Sorrell more than he would WPP.

“No one else can keep that company together the way he has been able to because he built it,” he told Reuters. “It’s the fall of an emperor and one that I think will not only take the empire down with him but will also have massive ramificati­ons for that entire industry.” —

 ??  ?? MARTIN SORRELL, chairman and chief executive officer of WPP, the world’s largest advertisin­g company, speaks at the Confederat­ion of British Industry’s (CBI) annual conference in London, Britain, Nov. 21, 2016.
MARTIN SORRELL, chairman and chief executive officer of WPP, the world’s largest advertisin­g company, speaks at the Confederat­ion of British Industry’s (CBI) annual conference in London, Britain, Nov. 21, 2016.

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