Thursday, April 28, 2016

WPP blames Uber, zero-based budgets and Brexit for tension as brands remain cautious with ad spend

Steve Kaplan Marketing:

The ad giant, which saw revenue rise 10.5% to £3.1bn for the first quarter of 2016, reported strong growth in all its regions including Britain and North America. Yet despite the “encouraging” results in the first quarter of 2016 and a positive outlook for the rest of the year, WPP chief executive Sir Martin Sorrell believes brands remain cautious when it comes to ad spend and are heavily focused on cost-cutting.

“Procurement and finance remain the dominant functions for understandable reasons, with marketing taking a back seat,” he says.

He goes on to state that many of WPP’s clients, which include Samsung, Nestle and Universal Music Group, are facing new challenges, leading to “considerable pressure in the system”.

“If you are running a legacy business, as many of our clients are, you face disrupters like Uber and Airbnb at one end of the spectrum, zero-based cost budgeters like 3G and Coty at the other end, with seemingly short-term focused activist investors in the middle, like Nelson Peltz, Bill Ackman and Dan Loeb. There is, therefore, considerable pressure in the system,” he explained.

Sorrell added that this “cocktail of difficult trends” has led to a short-term focus on results.

“Moreover, the average managerial life expectancy of a United States CEO is currently six to seven years, a CFO five to six years and a CMO two years, although the latter has improved from 18 months recently! This cocktail of difficult trends result, logically, in a short-term focus, reinforced by the needs of quarterly reporting and similarly focused, short-term, institutional investor measurement and incentives,” he added.

READ MORE: Consumer confidence stalls as Brexit concerns ‘hit home’

From a political perspective, the potential for Britain to leave the EU after the referendum in June also concerns Sorrell. Recent reports show that confidence levels among consumers and marketers are dropping as concerns about Britain’s status in Europe increase.

He concluded: “In the immediate future, we face the Brexit vote in the United Kingdom in June, where it is generally agreed by both sides that an ‘out’ vote will result, at least in the short-term or mid-term, in GDP weakness in the United Kingdom, the EU and possibly globally, let alone further political and economic uncertainty in the United Kingdom around Scottish Independence and further disintegration of the EU.”

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