Accenture Song closed its acquisition of Whalar Group this week in what founding partner Neil Waller called the largest creator economy transaction to date, with deal terms reportedly exceeding $500 million. The purchase lands 48 hours after Song announced the acquisition of U.S. social agency Superdigital, marking the consultancy's third influencer-infrastructure play since late 2023.
Whalar operates a 2,200-person creator network and manages end-to-end campaign production for brands including Coca-Cola, Unilever, and Samsung across 22 markets. The firm generated an estimated $180 million in revenue last year through a hybrid model combining talent representation, branded content studios, and first-party creator data licensing. Waller declined to disclose exact purchase terms but confirmed the valuation places Whalar above previous creator-economy benchmarks, including United Talent Agency's $200 million acquisition of influencer platform Grapevine in 2021.
The deal reflects a structural shift in how holding companies are pricing influencer assets. Traditional creative agencies trade at 0.8x to 1.2x revenue. Whalar's implied multiple sits closer to 2.8x, a premium Accenture is paying for proprietary creator relationships and performance attribution infrastructure. Song now controls three distinct layers of the influencer value chain: Superdigital's strategic planning and community management, Whalar's talent roster and production capacity, and an unnamed data analytics firm acquired in Q4 2023. Together, the portfolio handles an estimated $420 million in annual influencer spend for Fortune 500 clients.
Family offices backing DTC brands and luxury hospitality groups should note two implications. First, Accenture is building the first vertically integrated influencer consultancy capable of running attribution models from creator selection through sales lift, a capability currently fractured across 6-8 vendors in most enterprise marketing stacks. Second, the $500 million+ valuation establishes a new floor for creator-network exits. Independent agencies with $50 million+ in billings and proprietary talent contracts now have acquisition comps to anchor growth-equity conversations.
Watch for Accenture Song to consolidate the three entities under a unified brand by Q3 2025, likely with a renamed business unit focused exclusively on social and creator commerce. The firm is reportedly in discussions to acquire at least one Asia-Pacific influencer network to fill geographic gaps in its creator roster, with announcements expected before September. WPP and Publicis Groupe have both accelerated their own influencer M&A pipelines in response.
The transaction closes the week luxury conglomerate LVMH reported that 38% of new customer acquisition in its beauty division now originates from creator-driven campaigns, up from 22% two years prior.