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Publicis launches AI powered tool Marcel

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MUMBAI: Publicis Groupe has unveiled Marcel – named after Publicis Groupe founder Marcel Bleustein-Blanchet – an AI-powered innovation that will accelerate transforming the organisation from a holding company to a platform, creating the first truly borderless, frictionless enterprise workforce, comprised of 80,000 employees worldwide, and usher in a new era of creativity and innovation.

Publicis Groupe chairman and CEO Arthur Sadoun says,“In June last year, Publicis Groupe announced the creation of Marcel, to connect our 80,000 employees and completely reinvent the way that we work, for ourselves and our clients. Since then, our industry has gone through unprecedented challenges, demonstrating that incremental change is not a solution. The need for reinvention is stronger than ever.”

Marcel is a journey to shift Publicis Groupe from a holding company to a platform and give creative minds the freedom to progress and thrive in this ever-changing industry. With Marcel, clients will be able to leverage the incredible diversity of talent to bring to life the ideas they need to grow their business.

The company says that tying the development of Marcel to its one-year industry event hiatus was a controversial decision, but a necessary one. It drew a line in the sand and showed its determined to do whatever it takes to reinvent an industry that has struggled to evolve over the past 40 years.

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In a world where people no longer want to work for companies and instead expect companies to work for them, Marcel is the first enterprise platform designed with people-first benefits and experiences in mind. At its core, Marcel is about empowering every single Publicis employee to the power of 80,000. Founded in a belief that an augmented workforce leads to higher engagement, which in turn leads to better work and results for clients, Marcel is built on the foundation of four key pillars: knowledge, connectivity, opportunity and productivity.

The bold ambition to transform Publicis Groupe into a platform required that the Groupe take on very significant enterprise business challenges. One important challenge is around data. With more than 80,000 people and over 1,200 entities, spanning 200 specialities and thousands of clients, the Groupe has vast amounts of data. Publicis Groupe estimates well more than five billion data files.

In order to unlock the value of this data, the Groupe created the Marcel AI Platform built on Microsoft AI and knowledge graph technologies. This knowledge graph connects both structured and unstructured data that exist across the organisation and then maps relationships within it. This centralised, integrated source of data will power Marcel as well as other enterprise initiatives. The group will use Microsoft’s sophisticated AI tools to process, filter, connect and organise the data to make it useful for its people.

As a part of Marcel’s power of knowledge proposition, Publicis Groupe has entered into a partnership with the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity to access The Work, a unique digital platform that showcases over 200,000 pieces of award-winning creative work from 2001-2018.

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Built for today’s technology-savvy workforce, Marcel is launching as a mobile application for both Android and iOS. Future versions will include a desktop version or other interfaces as the need arises.

Designed to be as user-friendly as any consumer app, employees can use Marcel through voice or text input. The AI engine will suggest refinements to queries that provide large returns to help someone rapidly make connections and complete goals. Marcel will do more than respond to requests. It will also proactively present relevant knowledge, connections and opportunities. Each workday, Marcel will serve six prompts tailored to the person’s role and interests in the form of a daily digest. Marcel will refine what it presents each day based on an employee’s interaction and feedback.

Today, Marcel is tested by a team of 100 alpha users. In June, Publicis will release a beta version to 1000 people selected as an exact Publicis Groupe representation, by agency, role and geography. This group will provide feedback that will help refine the app. It wants to reach 90 per cent of its people by 2020.

This beta phase will include a precise on-boarding process defined to ensure beta user profiles are complete, a training module available to get the individual familiar with the Marcel platform and a feedback function included for employees to provide real-time feedback. 

The aim of this real-time exercise will allow Publicis Groupe to refine the app constantly, course correct as needed, improve the user’s experience and add functionality along the way. 

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There will be multiple, updated versions until the optimal state-of-the-art product developed for rollout to the entire Publicis Groupe. Publicis Groupe will begin Marcel rollout to the 80,000-person workforce in January 2019.

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Innocean renews global media partnership with Havas

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MUMBAI: Innocean has renewed its global media partnership with Havas Media Network following an internal review across Hyundai Motor Group brands.
The renewed mandate spans Hyundai, Kia and Genesis across Europe, the Middle East, Asia Pacific and Latin America. The work will be coordinated with Innocean’s international teams in Seoul, Frankfurt, Dubai, New Delhi and Jakarta.

The refreshed alliance is designed with a sharper focus on data and technology, aiming to connect the dots across customer acquisition, conversion and retention as the Group’s global audience continues to diversify.

Innocean head of global business Steve Jun, said the extension reflects a shared push for stronger, data-led media performance across key markets. He added that the partnership would focus on creating more connected and effective customer experiences for Hyundai Motor Group brands.

Havas Media Network global CEO Peter Mears, described the relationship as one built on innovation and global scale. He said the next phase would lean on the network’s Converged.AI platform to deliver seamless, data-driven media experiences and drive business outcomes for the automotive brands.

The renewed partnership officially commenced in January 2026.

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Dentsu ad report 2026 flags digital dominance as retail media soars

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INDIA: India’s advertising industry is entering a new phase of structural transformation, with digital media now the central growth engine, according to the Dentsu digital advertising report 2026.

Total advertising spends closed 2025 at Rs 1.21 lakh crore, up 8.3 per cent year on year, and are projected to reach Rs 1.40 lakh crore by 2027, implying a compound annual growth rate of over 7 per cent.

Digital advertising accounted for Rs 71,621 crore in 2025, representing 59 per cent of total spends. By 2027, digital’s share is expected to rise to around 70 per cent, with spends nearing Rs 98,034 crore.

The report stresses that this is no longer a temporary shift but a permanent rebalancing of advertising priorities, driven by mobile-first consumption, short-form video, creator ecosystems, embedded commerce and AI-led optimisation.

Retail media has emerged as the fastest-growing segment, with ad spends on e-retail platforms reaching Rs 17,601 crore in 2025: a surge of nearly 56 per cent year on year. Retail platforms are evolving into full-funnel media ecosystems, linking storytelling directly with purchase outcomes through first-party data.

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Within digital formats, social media leads with a 29 per cent share, closely followed by online video at 28 per cent, while paid search contributes 23 per cent. Online video is expected to overtake social as the largest digital format over the next two years.

Programmatic buying now accounts for 42 per cent of digital spends, exceeding Rs 30,000 crore, and is increasingly becoming the default media operating layer across video, connected TV and retail platforms.

FMCG remains the largest advertising category at 30 per cent of total spends, followed by e-commerce at 18 per cent, which also recorded the fastest growth.

Dentsu South Asia chief executive Harsha Razdan said the most meaningful industry shift has been in how consumers consciously allocate attention.

Dentsu South Asia president and chief strategy officer Narayan Devanathan, added that the next growth phase will belong to organisations that successfully integrate creativity, data, media and technology.

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Publicis Groupe posts strong revenue as AI drives demand

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PARIS: Publicis Groupe is laughing all the way to the bank whilst its rivals scramble to catch up. The French advertising colossus reported full-year 2025 net revenue of €14.5bn, marking its sixth consecutive year of outperforming the industry. Organic growth hit 5.6 per cent, accelerating past its five-year compound annual growth rate of 5.0 per cent.

The secret sauce? Artificial intelligence-powered products and services, which contributed roughly 300 basis points to growth. Arthur Sadoun, chairman and chief executive, has staked Publicis’s future on becoming clients’ “most valuable partner” for what the firm calls “agentic business transformation”—essentially helping companies build enterprise-grade AI solutions that actually make money.

The fourth quarter proved particularly robust, with organic growth of 5.9 per cent despite tougher comparisons. Connected media, which accounts for 60 per cent of the business, surged with high-single-digit growth. Creative and production services delivered mid-single-digit expansion. Only the technology consulting arm stumbled, finishing nearly flat for the year as clients adopted a “wait-and-see” attitude—a malaise afflicting all IT consulting firms.

Geography tells a tale of American dominance. The United States, representing 57 per cent of group revenue, grew 5.2 per cent organically for the year, cementing Publicis’s position as the market leader. Europe managed 4.2 per cent growth, whilst Asia-Pacific posted 5.8 per cent, with China impressing at 6.0 per cent. The most dramatic expansions came from emerging markets: Latin America roared ahead at 18.7 per cent, whilst Middle East and Africa surged 10.8 per cent.

Operating margin improved to 18.2 per cent from 18.0 per cent, delivering 50 basis points of operating leverage. Crucially, Publicis reinvested 30 basis points—totalling 230 basis points overall—into AI capabilities, talent upgrades and new business development. The remaining 20 basis points flowed straight to the bottom line. Michel-Alain Proch, chief financial officer, called it “the highest operating margin in the industry”.

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Free cash flow before working capital changes reached €2.03bn, up 10.6 per cent from an already-record 2024. The firm deployed roughly €1bn on bolt-on acquisitions targeting identity resolution, pharmaceuticals, influencer marketing and sports marketing. Client retention remained stellar at 98 per cent for top-100 clients, whilst new business wins exceeded $8bn.

Headline earnings per share climbed 6.6 per cent at constant currency to €7.48. In dollar terms—increasingly relevant given Publicis’s American dominance—EPS rose 7.0 per cent to $8.45. The board proposed a dividend of €3.75 per share, up 4.2 per cent, representing a payout ratio of 50.1 per cent, which Publicis claims is the highest in the industry.

The financial fortress looks impregnable. Net debt turned into net cash of €548m by year-end, down from net cash of €775m the previous year after funding acquisitions. The firm maintains €2bn in undrawn committed credit facilities and €4bn in cash and marketable securities. Average net debt to EBITDA stood at a negligible 1.0 times.

Industry sectors showed divergent fortunes. Consumer goods clients increased spending by 20 per cent, whilst automotive rose 14 per cent and financial services climbed 11 per cent. Technology clients, however, cut budgets by 7 per cent, and telecommunications spending dropped 2 per cent.

Publicis’s AI strategy extends beyond client services to internal transformation. The firm is “agentifying” processes using AI agents, equipping all 100,000-plus employees with AI tools through its Marcel learning platform. The goal: make everyone “AI-fluent” whilst boosting productivity and results. The company reckons AI-powered capabilities grew 20 per cent organically in 2025.

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Looking ahead, Publicis guided for 2026 organic growth of 4.0 to 5.0 per cent—marking a potential seventh consecutive year of industry outperformance. Operating margin should tick “slightly” higher from the already-elevated 18.2 per cent whilst maintaining “high levels” of investment. Free cash flow is targeted at roughly €2.1bn, based on an exchange rate assumption of €1.20 to the dollar, earmarked for dividends, maintaining a stable share count and more bolt-on acquisitions.

The firm’s longer-term ambitions border on audaciousness. Management projects annual net revenue growth of 6.0 to 7.0 per cent and earnings-per-share expansion of 7.0 to 9.0 per cent, both at constant currency. The logic: AI is fragmenting the marketing landscape, with no top client spending more than 4.0 per cent of budget on any single platform. Publicis reckons its “unique connective tissue” positions it perfectly to orchestrate this complexity.

The advertising world has witnessed a decade-long reshaping. Since 2017, when Publicis began its data and technology pivot, the firm has invested €14bn integrating capabilities whilst rivals dithered. That first-mover advantage in AI has compounded. Publicis now claims the number-one position in global media billings, including in the crucial American and Chinese markets. Its market capitalisation exceeds the combined value of its next two competitors.

Yet competition is heating up as everyone piles into AI. Omnicom’s proposed merger with IPG would create a formidable rival. Technology giants are muscling into advertising with their own AI platforms. And clients are becoming more sophisticated, building in-house capabilities and squeezing agency margins.

Publicis is betting the farm that complexity favours the orchestrator. As marketing technology proliferates and AI agents multiply, companies will need partners who can connect the dots. Whether that vision proves prescient or hubris will determine if Sadoun’s transformation becomes a case study in strategic brilliance or just another expensive pivot that failed to justify its price tag. For now, though, the numbers suggest Publicis is winning the AI arms race in adland—and widening the gap with every quarter.

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