More Agencies Are Finding Their Own Entrepreneurial Spirit by Partnering With Startups

Publicis Groupe, WPP bring fresh ideas back to clients

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As clients continue to demand more—more content, more impressions, more innovation—the largest agencies are taking some of their best lessons from smaller shops just getting started.

From WPP to Publicis Groupe, global players increasingly are looking to more nimble digital startups where an entrepreneurial spirit is at the core of the business.

It is becoming an important way for agencies to tap into the innovation that brands require, insiders say.

Publicis’ latest such investment comes in the form of a global competition, dubbedPublicis90. The initiative will fund 90 projects with 10,000 to 500,000 euros ($11,000 to $550,000) and offer one year of mentorship.

The effort is meant to demonstrate that Publicis is a digital force to be reckoned with. “Following the acquisition of Sapient, it is a way to really give flesh to and to show we are at the heart of digital ecosystems,” said Maxime Baffert, CEO of Publicis digital agency Proximedia Europe. “There’s also a huge interest from clients about everything regarding digital transformation.”

Publicis joins a host of industry ventures already underway, including WPP and Bruin Sports Capital’s investment in Courtside Ventures, a venture capital firm working with startup stage tech and media companies focused in sports, and the R/GA-sponsored Start-up Academy at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.

Publicis90 will not focus solely on any one sector—ad tech, mobile, Fintech or otherwise—but Publicis Groupe employees will participate in the first round of voting to ensure the ideas will have relevance for clients.

The key, Baffert said, is to deliver “an idea that is absolutely incredible,” whether it be a connected machine from Kuantom that learns a person’s preferred tastes and serves drinks tailored to those preferences or Damappa, a company that uses design to present complex data in easy-to-understand graphs. Both are among 3,000 ideas in the running.

A key element of the competition will be the year-long mentorship and guidance from Publicis executives, as startups can find it tough to break into the agency world.

At last year’s Cannes Lions Start-up Academy, Claus Moberg’s company, SnowShoe, gained valuable advice on everything from which holding companies own which agencies and how to explain what the company does in layman’s terms to how large companies make purchasing decisions.

The knowledge Moberg and his company came away with perfectly fits the mission of Rob Dembitz, head of Cannes Lions Innovation, which created the academy with R/GA.

“The beauty was the startups made new connections, found new investors and found new revenue,” said Dembitz.

Just as important, say those involved: fresh ideas agencies were able to take back to their clients.

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Nearly a year after Cannes Lions, SnowShoe has worked on several agency pitches and will soon have a few campaigns rolling out with agencies it became acquainted with at the festival. (SnowShoe CEO Claus Moberg declined to identify any of the agencies with which it has worked.)

The company creates 3-D pieces of plastic called stamps that can be used for experiential marketing. When the stamp is placed on top of a smartphone, sensors in the stamp unlock exclusive content online or download a song, without opening or using an app. Moberg said the Start-up Academy provided invaluable advice that “opened a new line of business for us that probably wouldn’t have been there had we not participated in the experience.”

This story first appeared in the March 7 issue of Adweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.

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The Deloitte You Meet at SXSW Won’t Be the One You’re Likely Familiar With Its new pitch to marketers starts in Austin By Lauren Johnson

deloitte-sxsw-hed-2016After recently acquiring San Francisco creative shop Heat, Deloitte Digital plans to show off its new “creative digital consultancy” to marketers at South by Southwest Interactive next week.

“It’s a magnet for digital creative and innovators, and that’s where we’re sitting with what we’re doing,” said Alicia Hatch, Deloitte Digital’s CMO, who has been attending SXSW for 15 years.

Dubbed the “Interplay Lab,” Deloitte Digital’s SXSW activation at the Palm Door in downtown Austin, Texas, is going to be an experiment with music and technology. Musicians including Vampire Weekend’s Chris Baio, André Anjos from RAC and Brad Oberhofer from indie band Oberhofer are slated to perform while attendees interact with an art installation made from 20 speakers and 12,000 LED lights. The activation will also include free Doppler wireless earbuds.

The creative twist on music isn’t just for show, though. According to Hatch, SXSW is also where Deloitte will start pitching marketers on its new model, one that meshes digital consultancy and creative chops.

“Some of our competitors have acquired creative shops, but it’s more about building digital shops,” Hatch said. “This is going out with this new model this year, and SXSW will be our first platform as an answer for what the industry continues to talk about.”

Over the past few years, Deloitte has acquired roughly 12 agencies, including mobile shop Ubermind in 2012 and Swedish agency Mobiento last year. While those acquisitions armed the company with the tools to build a digital practice, Heat was clearly a play for creative expertise.

“For so long, creative has been considered just a part of the marketing budget,” Hatch said. “But with all this disruption, creativity is what is driving a lot of the new ways of thinking.”

To Hatch’s point, consultancies like IBM, PwC and Accenture are also aggressively snapping up shops and marketing service companies to go head-to-head with traditional and digital agencies.

IBM, for example, has bought three companies this year: Resource/Ammirati, Aperto and ecx.io. It also signed a deal to acquire The Weather Company’s digital properties. Accenture has also made a handful of notable acquisitions in recent years, including Brazilian agency Ad.Dialeto in August and e-commerce focused Aquity Group in 2013.

According to Hatch, the moves by Deloitte Digital’s competitors don’t address concerns on the part of marketers like Pepsi’s Brad Jakeman that agencies are failing to keep up with the speed of change.

Asked if Deloitte Digital can compete with traditional agencies within holding companies, Hatch said, “Yes, I would say it’s competitive, and we’ll be a hit on some level to the agency and holding company world for consultants to have those services.”

“We’re calling it creative digital consultancy because it’s not just about agency services and doing consultancy separately—it’s bringing those two together,” she said.

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