Jaime Robinson stepped down from Joan, the creative agency she co-founded in 2016, ending a 10-year run at a mid-size independent known for integrated work spanning brand identity, advertising strategy, and in-house production. The exit removes half of the founding leadership team at a shop that built its reputation on integrated creative services without the holding-company infrastructure most clients expect at scale.
Joan was founded by Robinson and Lisa Clunie with backing that allowed the agency to operate without the typical new-business scramble. The firm's model centered on owning creative direction, brand strategy, and production under one roof—an approach that attracted consumer brands looking to consolidate vendor relationships. Robinson's departure arrives as independent agencies face renewed pressure from consulting firms acquiring creative capabilities and holding companies offering procurement-friendly bundled services. No succession plan or leadership replacement has been announced.
The timing matters for three reasons. First, independent agencies without private-equity backing or acquisition interest struggle to retain founding talent past the 10-year mark when equity structures stop aligning with personal liquidity needs. Second, Joan's integrated model requires leadership continuity to maintain client relationships built on founder access—a selling point that becomes a liability when half the founding team exits. Third, the agency landscape is consolidating around either scaled holding-company networks or smaller boutiques serving private-equity-backed brands, leaving mid-size independents with shrinking positioning options.
For allocators, this signals potential client movement. Brands that hired Joan for Robinson's personal involvement will evaluate whether the remaining leadership can deliver comparable strategic value. Competing agencies will approach Joan's roster within 90 days, testing client loyalty without the founder who likely secured the initial relationship. The departure also creates a case study for private-office principals evaluating direct investment in creative services: founder-dependent agencies carry structural risk that surfaces in leadership transitions, regardless of revenue stability.
The industry pattern is clear. Independent creative shops built on founder relationships either sell to holding companies before the 7-to-10-year mark or face talent and client attrition when founding partners exit. Joan now operates in the window where remaining leadership must either formalize succession, pursue acquisition conversations, or accept margin compression from client churn. Watch for new-business announcements from Joan in the next six months—aggressive pitch activity would signal confidence in post-founder positioning. Silence would suggest defensive client retention mode.
The fact worth tracking: Joan's employee count and client roster composition will reveal whether Robinson's exit was planned succession or a signal that the independent mid-size agency model no longer supports founding-partner economics at 10-year maturity.