Robert Senior, the new Global CEO at Publicis Groupe’s Saatchi & Saatchi, is quickly putting his stamp on the agency.
Senior, who was named CEO back in
September as part of a larger Publicis Groupe management revamp, has implemented a corporate restructuring at the agency that has disposed of the traditional regional operating formula.
It has
been replaced by two market clusters, one of which includes established markets like the U.S., UK, Germany and China. The other group includes emerging growth markets like most of Latin America, Asia
Pacific, Africa and the Middle East.
Chris Foster, who had been Saatchi’s APAC CEO, will now lead the traditional market cluster. His old position is being jettisoned. Justin
Billingsley, who had been COO of the shop’s Europe, Middle East and Africa region has been promoted to CEO of Dynamic {emerging) Markets. Billingsley will also lead agency-wide M&A
activity.
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The EMEA CEO position, formerly held by Senior (in addition to his global CEO duties) is also being eliminated. Foster’s old role, Worldwide COO is also being
shelved.
Most global holding company agencies use a regional structure. However, Interpublic’s media agencies UM and Initiative switched to a cluster-market model several years
ago.
Billingsley joined Saatchi & Saatchi in 2009 as chief executive and chairman of Saatchi & Saatchi Greater China, before moving to his EMEA role in 2013. Before
that, he held various senior marketing roles at companies including Unilever, Coca-Cola, Nokia and Orange.
Senior described the new model as a “focused operating structure for
the business.” He said that Billingsley’s “clarity of thought, decision-making and client-side experience make him the ideal choice to lead further growth across our new Dynamic
Markets region.”
Added Billingsley: “The brands we serve live in a flat, borderless world and our agency must too. To cluster markets based on what they mean to our
clients, versus where they are, is smart and I am energized to be leading our Dynamic Markets, from which the majority of the next half a billion middle class consumers will come."