Jaime Robinson is stepping down as co-founder and chief creative officer of Joan, the New York independent agency she launched in 2016 with Lisa Clunie. The exit closes a decade-long partnership that built the shop from zero to an estimated $30 million in annual revenue across clients including Patrón, Google, and General Mills. Clunie remains as sole CEO. No replacement CCO has been named.
Joan operates with roughly 100 staff across New York and Toronto offices. The agency carved differentiation in luxury spirits and premium consumer categories by avoiding holding-company bureaucracy and pitching long-form brand positioning over tactical execution. Robinson's departure follows a pattern seen across mid-tier independent shops where founding creative partners exit after stabilization phases, often signaling either acquisition groundwork or strategic pivots toward holding-company affiliation. Joan has remained fully independent since inception, a stance increasingly difficult to maintain as procurement departments demand global network reach.
The timing matters for three reasons. First, independent agencies in the $20M-$50M revenue band face heightened pressure from both upstart micro-shops undercutting on price and holding-company networks offering integrated media-creative bundles. Joan's creative-first positioning worked during the brand-building boom of 2016-2021 but now competes against performance-marketing urgency from CFO-led procurement. Second, Robinson's exit removes half of the founding equity equation, concentrating decision authority in Clunie but also reducing the founder story that differentiated Joan in new-business pitches. Third, the move arrives as luxury-spirits clients—Joan's core—face slowing growth. Patrón parent Bacardi reported flat North American sales in Q4 2024, and premium tequila category growth decelerated to 3.2% from 8.7% a year prior, per IWSR data.
Operators should watch whether Joan announces a minority investment or advisory-board additions within 90 days—standard moves to stabilize post-founder-exit perception. Allocators tracking agency M&A should note that single-leader independent shops typically transact at 4.2x EBITDA versus 5.8x for dual-founder structures, per Clarity Capital's 2024 agency transactions report. The solo-CEO structure also increases acquisition appeal for holding companies seeking tuck-in creative capabilities without founder-retention complexity. Joan's client roster skews luxury and premium, categories where brand CMOs still allocate 18-22% of budgets to creative development versus 8-12% in mass consumer, making the shop a logical target for networks rebuilding creative credentials after losing talent to independents over the past decade.
Clunie's next hire—whether a CCO replacement or a COO to handle operations—will signal whether Joan intends to scale toward $50M and holding-company acquisition or stabilize at current size as a boutique. The agency has not won a major new account since landing a Google project in mid-2023, and its last reported new-business win exceeded $5 million in fees over two years ago.