Additional Information


Content

Omnicom merges £60m Adam & Eve with DDB

DDB Worldwide has acquired Adam & Eve for an estimated £60 million and is merging the shop with its London outpost to create Adam & Eve/DDB.

Adam & Eve/DDB's management line-up includes only two DDB executives

Adam & Eve/DDB's management line-up includes only two DDB executives

Share this article

The deal is expected to net James Murphy and David Golding, who hold 25 per cent stakes in Adam & Eve, total payments in the order of £15 million upon the completion of a five-year earnout. Ben Priest could clear a total in excess of £13 million, with the remainder of the shareholding split among other staff.

Adam & Eve staff dominate the new management team – Murphy becomes the chief executive, Golding the chief strategy officer, Priest the executive creative director and Jon Forsyth the chief comms strategy officer. Ben Tollett and Emer Stamp will also take on executive creative director roles.

From the old DDB regime, only the chief executive, Stephen Woodford, who will remain as chairman, and Tribal DDB’s managing director, Tom Roberts, continue as part of the new senior team. Discussions with the remainder of the DDB management team are said to be confidential and ongoing.

The deal was signed late on Tuesday night after nearly a year of on-off negotiations and months of speculation.

Adam & Eve/DDB will have combined billings of £270 million, income of around £50 million and 400 staff, and will be based in DDB’s Paddington offices.

Client conflict created by the merger includes The Telegraph and Financial Times, Benecol and Flora, and John Lewis and Harvey Nichols. Murphy said that, while discussions would be held with these clients, it was unrealistic not to expect some fallout.

Explaining the deal, Murphy commented: "Our minds wouldn’t have been turned to a deal like this for a year or two but, when it was DDB, it was such a good cultural and personal fit, we thought it was too good an opportunity to miss."

He added that it was always the ambition to return to an agency network and that DDB’s long history of creativity had made it a more attractive option than other groups that had approached them.

This article was first published on campaignlive.co.uk

blog comments powered by Disqus

Additional Information

Latest jobs Jobs web feed




 


 


BR Insight

Digital Integration: Connecting the Dots (Webcast) External website

Integrated digital marketing offers huge opportunities to engage, servic...

 

Mobile 2013: Top 5 Need-to-Knows to Fully Cash In (Expert Reports) External website

Mobile marketing is coming of age, and the pace of change is now exponen...

 

Internet Shopping: 6 Quick Wins to Revive Your Online Sales (Expert Reports) External website

With UK consumers spending an average of £1,083 a year online, int...

 

Conversational Mobile Marketing: Engage Customers and Empower Advocates (Expert Reports) External website

The pressure is on for marketers and mobile operators to embrace a strat...

 

Tablets: Redefining Consumer Experiences (Webcast) External website

As a nation, the UK is media and technology obsessed with over half of t...

 

Harness the Power of Your Customer's Digital Voice (Webcast) External website

All customers have the potential to become your brand advocates, driving...

 

Back to top ^