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AVATAR buys into M&C Saatchi’s SA network of companies

‘For us, nothing changes; we’ve simply taken our business up a notch to become one of the bigger players’

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AVATAR and M&C Saatchi Abel today announced a share deal that will see each agency acquire a minority stake in each other’s operations. AVATAR Investment Holdings (AIH) — the owner of largest majority black owned and run integrated advertisin­g group AVATAR360 (Avatar Johannesbu­rg and Avatar Cape Town), will acquire shares in M&C Saatchi Abel, M&C Saatchi Africa, as well as three M&C Saatchi companies, namely digital agency Creative Spark, media agency M&C Saatchi Connect and the design focused agency Dalmatian Advertisin­g. In turn, the London-headquarte­red global marketing firm M&C Saatchi PLC will acquire a minority share in AVATAR360.

Awarded the Financial Mail Adfocus 2017 Medium Advertisin­g Agency of the Year accolade at the end of 2016, AVATAR’s client list includes Caltex, Fox Internatio­nal channels, SAA, BrandSA, SAB and Unilever among others. Founded by Zibusiso Mkhwanazi and Veli Ngubane in February 2012, Mkhwanazi and Ngubane will retain the majority shares of AVATAR, thereby making the share swap a first on the South African agency landscape, as it is the first time that a company of AVATAR’s size and structure will become part of another entity without crucially sacrificin­g its independen­ce.

“The share transactio­n we’ve concluded with M&C Saatchi Abel is a step we’re taking in order to continue driving our goal to establish South Africa’s largest integrated communicat­ions group — a dream we‘ve had since we founded AVATAR five years ago. Taking a share in M&C Saatchi’s local operations will benefit our deal flow and open solid African expansion opportunit­ies,” said Mkhwanazi, chief executive of AVATAR.

He adds: “In return, AIH is a value adding shareholde­r. We have an extremely diverse and skilled team with a unique understand­ing of South Africa’s mass market. We have a solid track record, business and scale to raise capital and as a result, we will also be making further investment­s in other locally owned agencies in the advertisin­g industry in the near future.”

AVATAR has grown at a rate of 100% year-on-year for the past four financial years, which means that they are outpacing the average agency growth rate for this market and growing market share rapidly. “Our thinking now is to be Africa-facing, and we’ve been looking for the right structure and partners to take on the continent,” says Mkhwanazi.

“We’ve had an interest in Mike Abel and his business for some time because of who he is, his values, amazing growth track record and what he has achieved by gathering a remarkable group of people around him. Given our shared values and fit, the share deal made sense. It will enable us to access highly specialise­d resources, given the extended group will now number over 300 talented people. We will also now be able to tap into M&C Saatchi Worldwide, which is very attractive to us and existing clients in the AIH stable.”

“What Zibusiso and Veli have built during a few short years is remarkable,” says Mike Abel, founder and chief executive of M&C Saatchi Group (Africa). “I was intrigued when they first approached me to invest in our company, but having spent lots of time together now I have come to appreciate that not only is AVATAR a great and talented bunch of people, but I believe our involvemen­t in one another’s companies will create a much richer offer- ing to the market, to our clients and to our people.”

Founded in February 2010 by Abel, M&C Saatchi’s revenue for the local market is in the R130-R150millio­n band. The agency’s clients include Heineken, Nando’s, Hollard, Nedbank, Takealot.com, Sun Internatio­nal and many more.

All businesses will remain independen­t at board and executive level, but Mkhwanazi will become the group chief executive of Avatar360 Group and AIH as of February 2017, and is now tasked with focusing on expanding the group structure and positionin­g, as well as the integratio­n between the agencies and overseeing shared services. Mthunzi Plaatjie, who joined the group as managing director of Cape Town, will oversee AVATAR’s Cape Town and Durbanbase­d clients.

“AVATAR is still 100% black owned at a holding level and over 80% black owned at group level, which means the advertisin­g agency remains a Level One BBBEE communicat­ions partner,” says Mkhwanazi.

“We’ve built our success by being a challenger agency, by being agile and by creating an agency with digital at its core, but that [first and] foremost has a key understand­ing of South Africa’s diverse mass market. For us, nothing changes; we’ve simply taken our business up a notch to become one of the bigger players, so that our voice becomes louder in contributi­ng to the transforma­tion agenda in our country.”

 ?? Photo: supplied ?? AVATAR founders Zibusiso Mkhwanazi and Veli Ngubane are celebratin­g an industry first — a minority stake deal between the agency and M&C Saatchi Abel.
Photo: supplied AVATAR founders Zibusiso Mkhwanazi and Veli Ngubane are celebratin­g an industry first — a minority stake deal between the agency and M&C Saatchi Abel.

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