Campaign UK

ST LUKE’S

Independen­t brand strategy and creative agency

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St Luke’s quietly got on with business in 2016 but still managed to increase its client roster, add more staff and widen its offering with the launch of a production arm. Silence is clearly golden for this agency, which appears to have achieved three steady years of growth . Remember, it was absent from the

School Reports from 2011 to 2014 after achieving a worrisome score of three.

Neverthele­ss, losing Strongbow’s £3.5m ad account was a kick in the teeth, not just financiall­y but symbolical­ly. St Luke’s had held the Heineken-owned business for 11 years and it had helped the agency win several more brands – including Heineken itself. And the shop considers two Strongbow ads to be among the best work of its 21-year history.

In the only significan­t change to St Luke’s stable senior management team, Ed Palmer rejoined the agency in March from M&C Saatchi, replacing Dan Hulse as managing director as the latter took on the newly created role of chief strategy officer.

Then, in June, St Luke’s officially launched Apostle, an in-house production company headed by director Sye Allen. This was the formalisat­ion of an operation that had been growing behind the scenes for years, reflecting many creative agencies’ desire to pull as much production in-house as possible as margins get tighter. Apostle’s clients include Littlewood­s, Very and Mooncup.

In terms of creative output, St Luke’s didn’t set the world on fire last year but Christmas spots for Littlewood­s (“The walk”) and Very (“A big-hearted tale”) were relatively pleasing to the eye. Perhaps more agenda-setting work in 2017 will send steady St Luke’s into hyperdrive.

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