Eleftheria Parpis
Mar 24, 2016

Sorrell: Martinez found guilty in court of public opinion

MIAMI - Making his first public comments about the discrimination suit that has rocked J. Walter Thompson this month, Sir Martin Sorrell—speaking via teleconference at the 4As Transformation Conference here—said CEO Gustavo Martinez resigned because he was found guilty in the court of public opinion.

Sorrell: Martinez found guilty in court of public opinion

"Whether you believe Gustavo was innocent or guilty — and that has yet to be determined in the court of law — in the court of public opinion, he has been judged and been found guilty," said Sorrell during an interview conducted by Ken Auletta, a writer for The New Yorker. "He thought and I thought that it was in best interest to the company that he should resign and be replaced by Tamara Ingram as CEO."

When Auletta pressed Sorrell on the timing of Martinez’s resignation, before the investigation had been completed, Sorrell repeated the statement he made last week that the decision for the CEO’s resignation was a mutual one. "It was a mutual agreement that it was in the interest of the company, the clients, to try to end the public examination," he said.

Auletta questioned WPP’s handling of the JWT case, including an early statement made that its investigation had not found any evidence of the claims made by Erin Johnson, the agency’s chief communications officer who filed the suit. "The statement that we made was that there was nothing found as yet. There are two key words there, as of yet," he said.

WPP initiated an investigation immediately, he said, upon first receiving a letter from Johnson’s lawyers and the subsequent filing of the suit. The company later hired Bettina Plevan "in order to investigate independently," he said.

Sorrell vehemently countered the controversial statements made by Publicis Group CEO Maurice Levy yesterday that the JWT case was an isolated incident involving "one man’s mistake."

"His view was that the J. Walter Thompson and Gustavo Martinez case was a one-off. I disagree. I would disagree violently with that supposition," said Sorrell. "Maurice has a habit of ignoring the facts."

To illustrate his point, Sorrell pointed to his own holding company’s female employment numbers, which show 50% women in junior and mid-management positions, but "drops unacceptably to a third," he said, adding that the same thing is true for other groups, such as LBGT, transgender, Hispanic and African Americans. "It is unacceptably low."

While the industry has put programs in place to try to improve diversity in the industry and to provide training for racial and gender bias, "it is clearly not been enough," he said.

Auletta also asked Sorrell whether Johnson would be returning to the agency. "It’s up to her whether she wants to come back to the company," he said.

 

Source:
Campaign US

Related Articles

Just Published

17 hours ago

Agency Report Cards 2024: We grade 25 APAC networks

The grades are in for Campaign Asia's 22nd annual evaluation of APAC agency networks. Subscribe to read our detailed analyses.

17 hours ago

Publicis Groupe acquires influencer agency Captiv8

Captiv8 will join forces with the group's Influential and Epsilon.

18 hours ago

Agency Report Card 2024: EssenceMediacom

In a difficult year underlined by restructuring and turmoil within parent company GroupM, the world’s largest media agency still holds many of the keys to mount a stronger rebound in 2025.

18 hours ago

Disney sets sail: VP Sarah Fox on the brand’s ...

With localised strategy, strong fan engagement, and Disney’s knack for storytelling, Cruise Line will make its maiden voyage in December 2025. Campaign speaks exclusively with VP and regional GM Sarah Fox ahead of Campaign 360 next week.