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The really real reasons Omnicom and Publicis are merging"Publicis and Omnicom are merging because of us. Anyone who has used Facebook, done a search on Google, or watched Netflix instead of buying a local newspaper, using the phone book or watching broadcast television has contributed to this merger". These are the words of Matt Straz, published in MediaPost and The Media Online. Presumably, by "us", Mr Stratz alludes to the named new media players - although he doesn't represent any of those quoted*, thus leaving a questionable link to his inclusion in such an illustrious company. That aside, it is preposterously arrogant and naïve to claim that the global giant communication groups are merging primarily because of the threat to traditional media. Advertising dollars follow attention, always have, always will, irrespective of which channels the audiences can be found in. The global groups own most of the media buying companies - the new Publicis Omnicom Groupe will see over 41% of all US and 31% of all EU advertising spend channelled through its books. That includes a portion of Google's $43bn 2012 ad revenue, as well as Facebook's relatively paltry $5bn**. Netflix doesn't have any advertising revenue, it's a subscription only revenue model, which may not remain so for much longer either. One crucial thing Stratz fails to account for is that the vast majority of clients don't want to deal with a multiplicity of media channels. They have businesses to run. They want a service provider to do that for them, and agency networks make up the bulk of these service providers - be it on TV, OOH, Facebook or any digital platform you care to list. Successful subscription-only content providers are very few and far between, with most yet to prove their sustainability any more than the print media is able to prove its long term sustainability. Omnicom and Publicis are merging for three primary reasons, in the following order:
When considering the role of big data, fragmenting media and diversifying advertising spend, it is prudent to remember several things to maintain perspective:
*Mr Stratz was employed by MEC, a media buying company in the WPP stable from 2002 to 2008 and is now CEO of Namely, a cloud based human resource analytics company. **By comparison, measured adspend in the US alone in 2012 was in excess of $250bn, of which the single largest spender was P&G at a shade under $4,9bn. About Justin McCarthyJustin is a media, marketing, technology and telecoms specialist and a creativity and innovation crusader. Persuasion comes in many forms - subtlety is not his favourite and as a libertarian free speech advocate he defends the right to offend. He writes an opinionista column for Daily Maverick. Contact details: Twitter @justininza | Google+ | https://za.linkedin.com/in/justinmccarthyza | http://whoswho.co.za/justin-mccarthy-1855195 View my profile and articles... |