Keith Cartwright is leaving 72andSunny, the third senior executive to depart the independent Los Angeles agency since mid-2023. Cartwright's exit follows the departures of CCO Zach Hilder in October 2023 and founding partner John Boiler in March 2023, compressing the agency's leadership bench at a moment when brand clients are consolidating rosters and demanding proof of creative-plus-data integration.
Cartwright joined 72andSunny in 2019 after a tenure at Wieden+Kennedy Portland, bringing West Coast automotive and technology experience to an agency then expanding beyond its Google and Target core. His portfolio included work for Smirnoff and Carl's Jr., campaigns that leaned into cultural conversation without the safety of celebrity anchors. The agency has not named a replacement. ADWEEK confirms the departure but reports no immediate succession plan, suggesting the role may be absorbed or eliminated rather than backfilled.
The exits matter because 72andSunny operates without the balance-sheet cushion of a holding company parent. Independent agencies carry fixed overhead against variable revenue, and senior departures compress margin faster than at network shops where talent can be redeployed across offices. The agency's 2022 revenue sat near $85 million according to industry estimates, down from a 2019 peak above $100 million. Losing three executives with combined tenure exceeding 25 years means losing client relationships, pitch credibility, and the institutional memory that allows agencies to move quickly when briefs arrive.
The timing compounds pressure. Luxury and premium brands are conducting annual reviews earlier than usual, with Q1 2025 decisions typically reserved for Q2 now landing in February and March. Agencies without stable leadership telegraphs risk to procurement teams already inclined toward WPP or Publicis Groupe options that promise global scale and AI-driven media efficiency. 72andSunny's independent status, once a differentiation point, now requires extra diligence from clients who want assurance the agency will staff their business consistently over a three-year contract.
What operators should watch: whether 72andSunny promotes from within or recruits externally to fill creative and strategic gaps left by Cartwright, Hilder, and Boiler. External hires signal ambition but take six to nine months to achieve full productivity. Internal promotions preserve culture but may lack the senior client relationships required to defend existing accounts. Watch also for Q2 2025 new-business announcements. Agencies bleeding talent either win replacement revenue quickly or enter a managed decline where remaining clients begin contingency planning.
The Los Angeles agency market now holds 18 shops with billings above $50 million, up from 12 in 2020. Most are network-backed. 72andSunny's next move will clarify whether independence remains viable at scale or whether the model works only for boutiques billing under $30 million with lean overhead and founder-led client service.