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U.S. Agency Revenue Jumps 8.8% to $28.2 Billion April 30, 2007

Posted by Mark Blei in : Uncategorized , trackback

U.S. Agency Revenue Jumps 8.8% to $28.2 Billion

Sea Change: Internet Drives Marketing-Services Gains; JWT Top U.S. Agency Brand; Dentsu Leads World Chart

Published: April 30, 2007

CHICAGO (AdAge.com) — Revenue for U.S. marketing-communications agencies jumped 8.8% to $28.2 billion in 2006, the strongest growth since ad spending began to rebound from recession in 2002.

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The hot growth came from marketing services, fueled by digital. Traditional ad agencies, grappling with a shift from old media, saw tepid growth.

Agency revenue from marketing services rocketed 13.1% to $15.1 billion, the strongest growth since the recession, according to the 63rd annual Advertising Age Agency Report. Agency revenue from traditional advertising and media rose just 4.2% to $13.1 billion, the weakest growth since 2003, the first full year of the advertising recovery.

In 2006, U.S. agencies collectively generated less than half of their revenue — 46.4% — from traditional advertising and media planning/buying, with the rest coming from a range of marketing services including digital/interactive, direct marketing, sales promotion, health care and PR. Marketing services grabbed 53.6% of U.S. marketing-communications agency revenue. That was up from 51.5% in 2005, the first year that marketing services topped advertising/media.

Impact of interactive
What’s behind the change? No surprise: the internet. U.S. interactive-agency revenue rocketed 23.1%, driving the increase in marketing services. But digital is more than interactive shops; it’s an integral part of marketing services from direct to promotion. “Interactive is huge,” says Chris Weil, chairman-CEO of Momentum Worldwide, a promotions agency owned by Interpublic Group of Cos. “If anybody in marketing is not a big part of interactive, they won’t be around much longer.”

Traditional advertising certainly is under pressure. The 4.2% U.S. revenue growth for traditional advertising/media agencies roughly tracks with ad spending: U.S. measured spending on traditional media last year grew a soft 3.2%, according to TNS Media Intelligence data.

Among key points from the Agency Report:

The Big Four last year kept the same worldwide-revenue rankings in place since 2003: Omnicom, WPP, Interpublic and Publicis.

Interpublic was No. 1 as recently as 2000. It fell to second, behind Omnicom, in 2001, and third, behind WPP, in 2003. Interpublic could slump to No. 4 in 2007; Publicis, with its faster organic growth and the Digitas acquisition, is coming up fast. Interpublic’s position will depend in part on how much progress it makes this year in its stated goal to achieve organic revenue growth “comparable to industry peers … by 2008.”

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Contributing: Kenneth Wylie

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