Jaime Robinson stepped down from Joan, the New York independent creative agency he co-founded in 2016 with Lisa Clunie, ending a 10-year run that repositioned the shop as a category option for brands seeking alternatives to holding-company networks. The move was disclosed internally last week. No successor creative lead has been named.
Robinson and Clunie built Joan from zero revenue to an estimated $25 million annual run rate, securing Nike, Patagonia, Google, and Tonal as anchor clients. The agency maintained a 45-person headcount without outside capital, unusual discipline in an era when peer independents routinely accept private-equity stakes or holding-company acquisition offers. Robinson held the title of Chief Creative Officer. Clunie continues as CEO and now sole equity principal.
The departure matters because Joan operated as a proof point for the independent-agency thesis that dominated marketing-press narratives between 2018 and 2023. Robinson's creative pedigree—a Cannes Grand Prix winner before founding Joan—provided client-facing credibility that smaller shops struggle to replicate. His exit removes half of the founding partnership CMOs cited when justifying budget allocations to an agency without holding-company insurance. Patagonia, which consolidated its creative account at Joan in 2021, now faces a structural question: whether the agency retains the specific creative sensibility that justified the move, or whether Robinson's departure triggers a formal review. Nike's relationship, structured as project-based rather than AOR, offers natural offramps if the creative product shifts.
Clunie now carries sole principal risk. The next six months will show whether Joan's client roster remains stable or whether Robinson's exit initiates a quiet review cycle. Independent agencies lose founders regularly; the ones that survive do so by demonstrating that their creative product derives from systems rather than individuals. Joan has not yet made that case publicly. The agency declined to comment on succession planning or whether it will hire a replacement CCO.
Watch whether Patagonia or Nike issue any public statements of support in the next 90 days. Silence would be the signal. Also watch whether Joan hires a name-brand CCO from a network agency, which would indicate Clunie views the departure as a structural vulnerability requiring immediate repair, or whether she promotes internally, which would suggest confidence in existing team depth.