Ciro Sarmiento has left his Chief Creative Officer role at Colle McVoy, the Minneapolis-based independent agency with $75 million in estimated billings. The exit comes 14 months after Sarmiento joined from Deutsch LA, where he spent six years building work for Taco Bell and Target.
Colle McVoy has not announced a replacement. The agency currently employs approximately 400 people across its Minneapolis headquarters and satellite offices, with a client roster that includes Land O'Lakes, Mall of America, and Sleep Number. Sarmiento's departure was confirmed by Adweek on Tuesday. No severance details or transition timeline were disclosed. The agency declined to comment on interim creative leadership structure.
The move matters because mid-sized regional independents are losing creative chiefs at an accelerating rate while holding companies consolidate overlapping shops. Colle McVoy operates in a tier where $75 million in billings no longer guarantees the budget to retain senior creative talent against coastal agencies paying $450,000 to $650,000 base for CCO roles. Sarmiento's LinkedIn shows no new position, which typically signals either a portfolio-building pause or negotiations with multiple suitors. The pattern: seasoned creatives leave independents for either holding-company scale or founder equity. Colle McVoy offers neither.
The timing compounds pressure on founder-led independents in tertiary markets. Minneapolis lost Fallon to Publicis consolidation. Martin Williams closed. Periscope merged into Quad. Colle McVoy remains one of three independents in the Twin Cities billing above $50 million, alongside Barkley and Haberman. Client concentration risk is high: Land O'Lakes represents an estimated 22% of revenue. Sleep Number, another top-three client, has cut marketing spend 18% year-over-year as mattress retail contracts. Mall of America is renegotiating all agency contracts for 2025 with procurement advisors, according to two people familiar with the review.
Operators should watch for three signals in the next 90 days: whether Colle McVoy promotes internally or conducts an external search, which reveals appetite for transformation versus continuity; whether Land O'Lakes or Sleep Number launch reviews, which would force the agency into defensive positioning without a creative lead; and whether Sarmiento surfaces at a holding-company network, which would indicate the salary premium required to retain CCO-level talent is now beyond independent reach. Allocators evaluating agency investments should mark CCO tenure as a leading indicator: when it drops below 18 months, the business model is breaking.
Sarmiento's next move will price the creative-leadership market for independents. If he joins a network at $600,000-plus, the signal is clear: regional shops can no longer afford the talent their clients expect.