Alison Weissbrot
Oct 21, 2020

Philippe Krakowsky to succeed Michael Roth as IPG CEO

Krakowsky will take the helm effective January 1 and Roth will move into the executive chairman role

Philippe Krakowsky is an 18-year veteran of IPG and was elevated to the COO role last year. (IPG)
Philippe Krakowsky is an 18-year veteran of IPG and was elevated to the COO role last year. (IPG)

IPG said on Wednesday that CEO Michael Roth will step down at the end of the year. He will be succeeded by IPG EVP and COO Philippe Krakowsky effective January 1.

IPG also reported earnings for Q3 that came in below expectations, with a revenue decrease of 5.2% year over year to $1.95 billion due to the ongoing pandemic.

Krakowsky, an 18-year IPG exec, has been the favored candidate to succeed Roth since he was elevated to COO last year. Prior to that he was CEO of IPG’s media group Mediabrands and has overseen communications, talent, business development and strategy functions. He will remain chief strategy officer at IPG.

"Philippe is the right CEO for the next era at IPG," Roth said in a statement. "He is a brilliant  strategist and effective leader who has played a key role in developing our open  architecture client service model, as well as modernizing our data, marketing  services and media solutions. Our partnership over the years has been a key factor in our long-term success with both clients and our people.” 

Roth has been executive chairman and CEO of IPG since 2004, when he was brought in from the financial world to turn around the struggling holding company after an accounting scandal. He restructured the holding company and created its open architecture model, where agencies across the group are incentivized to collaborate. 

“Michael’s leadership of IPG has been and continues to be outstanding. He has  substantially transformed the company and ushered in a new era of modern  marketing solutions," said David Thomas, Presiding Director of the IPG Board of Directors in a statement.”

IPG has been the strongest performer of the big six agency groups in recent years, including during the pandemic, and the Q3 organic revenue decline of 5.2% was better than Publicis Groupe at 5.6% and Havas at 10.4%, the other two groups to report so far for this quarter.
 
Roth, a former tax lawyer, was originally a non-executive director of IPG and the company appointed him as CEO helped to stabilise the company's finances and debt during a torrid period.
 
In a 2017 interview with Campaign, Roth said: "What keeps me going is I love what I do... I love the people and the organisation. Where else can you get to have a career that is global in nature, that has 50,000 employees under your responsibility, with the best talent in the world? And we’re performing well. Why wouldn’t anyone want to do that [job]?"
Source:
Campaign US

Related Articles

Just Published

1 day ago

Tech On Me: Are Chinese tech giants doing enough to ...

In this week's edition: Chinese social media platforms take on xenophobia, Australia looks to prevent teens from using social media, Meta's plans to introduce generative AI into the metaverse, among other tech news in the region.

1 day ago

Samsung’s new global campaign taps travel bug to ...

The work by BBH Singapore shows how new AI features in the Galaxy S24 like 'circle to search' turn travel photos into mobile tools.

1 day ago

Agency Report Cards 2023: We grade 31 APAC networks

Campaign Asia-Pacific presents its 21st annual evaluation of APAC agency networks based on their 2023 business performance, innovation, creative output, awards, action on DEI and sustainability, and leadership.

1 day ago

Agency Report Card 2023: Wavemaker

With a sharp ascent to the top spot in Campaign’s Media rankings for 2023, Wavemaker had a solid year of performance even amidst an uncertain economic landscape.