Eight years ago, Publicis Groupe was considered a leader in digital services. Since then, however, the world has evolved.
"The value equation is changing," said Maurice Levy, CEO, Publicis
Groupe. "When they say I want more for less, we cannot say the client is stupid. We have to say okay and have to organize ourselves. We have to get more efficient and get to a new value chain, and to
help the client in business transformation."
Today, Publicis unveiled its 65-slide Bastille Day strategic plan that executives say will enable the holding company to thrive in this
disruptive world.
"The network is moving to an empowered and consumer-focused age and a convergence — screens rather than channels — age," says Levy.
The core of this
model delivers a new framework that combines insights, strategy, creativity, consulting, technology, content, execution and measurement. Rather than silo expertise into specific agencies, Publicis'
new client integration models will provide unified access to the best of Publicis Groupe.
As such, clients will be able to work across all agencies: Leo Burnett, Publicis Worldwide, Saatchi
& Saatchi, Starcom Media Group, Zenith Optimedia Group, MSL Group, and Publicis Healthcare Communications Group.
In addition, there will be a new united global platform that will connect
to a wide variety of technology and data partners, including Adobe and Acxiom, as well as a united partnering point for critical e-commerce enablers, such as Hybris and IBM.
This plan focuses
on four key points of differentiation. First, to creatively tell stories and build brands that consultants do not have. Second, to identify, segment and distribute stories across screens, which
neither tech platforms nor consultants can. Third, to deliver tech enablement, commerce and CRM at scale that other holding companies and consultants cannot. Finally, offer the ability to deliver
today to get the client to tomorrow with deep knowledge of brands and consumers emotion that consultants have not.
"We built the strongest hard-to-duplicate portfolio of digital
assets for the digital age," says Levy. "No one can match. No one. We are uniquely positioned to deliver."
Publicis' recent acquisition of Sapient is key to this transformation. "It is moving
us from a digital leader to marketing business leader," says Levy. "As soon as the business acquisition closes, we will have 50% of our revenue from digital and we will have a massive acquisition of
business talent."
Once the proposed acquisition is completed, added Levy, "Publicis will be uniquely positioned to help all clients with true depth of expertise in all key areas for the future
of marketing. It will organize in modern ways and work with the best of technology platforms and data to ensure our clients win in the converged era and empowered age."
One advantage to the
Sapient operational structure, said Levy, is its open platform, which enables it to work with outside parties, such as Adobe.
Still, emerging markets aren't as essential to its future
growth plans, since Levy says it is too hard to predict their growth. He also says Publicis will continue to invest in other agencies. "The minority vs. majority investment question is something we
struggle with all the time. We see it kind of like watchdogs and lighthouses. They let us watch what is happening and allow us to see the next wave," he noted. "We decide according to the best
interest in our clients where we have to put the money. We prefer not to bet on only one way."
Looking forward, December 10 marks the end of the initial 20 business day tender offer
period for the Sapient acquisition, which is expected to be renewed until all conditions precedent are satisfied.
By 2018, Publicis expects 50% of its revenue will come from digital, 35%
from emerging channels, and 10% overlap for a total of 75%. This transformation will lead to more than $1 trillion in billings in the coming years through $134 billon from consulting, $400 billion in
marketing this form of new storytelling and content, and $900 billion in technology solutions.