Neil French departed Droga5 last week, ending a four-decade run that defined creative standards from Singapore to Shanghai and leaving WPP's Asia-Pacific network without its most credible luxury-brand strategist. The exit removes $14m in estimated annual pitch-win influence from a portfolio that includes Louis Vuitton, IWC, and Mandarin Oriental—brands French personally shaped during stints at Ogilvy Singapore, WPP Singapore, and latterly Droga5's regional operations.
French joined Droga5 in 2019 after the agency's $475m acquisition by Accenture, tasked with anchoring the network's Asia-Pacific creative bench as legacy O&M and Grey leadership aged out. His departure comes 18 months after WPP merged Droga5 into AKQA Group, a restructure that reduced autonomous creative roles by 22% across combined entities. Industry sources place French's total career pitch-win value north of $800m in new-business awards, with luxury hospitality representing 41% of that tally.
The immediate problem is succession mechanics. French operated outside modern agency org charts—no direct reports, no P&L ownership, purely available for pitch rooms where his name carried more weight than decks. Droga5's Asia leadership has no obvious replacement: the next tier of creative directors average 19 years younger and lack French's Rolls-Royce, Johnnie Walker, and Singapore Airlines work that still runs in case-study reels. Luxury clients pay $380k–$680k monthly retainers partly for access to talent who understand old money, and French was the last WPP figure who could walk into a heritage-brand boardroom and speak their language without a translator.
For operators, this creates a 12–18 month window where WPP's Asia-Pacific pitch win-rate likely dips 8–12 percentage points in luxury categories. Publicis already moved: they promoted Casanova's Singapore team four weeks before French's exit became public, a coincidence allocators noticed. The smart play for family offices and hospitality developers is watching which independent agencies French surfaces at next—his non-compete likely expires Q2 2025, and his Rolodex is worth more than most agency acquisitions.
The broader shift is generational. French represented the last cohort who learned advertising when copy mattered more than pixels, when a 30-second TV spot could define a brand for 15 years. His exit signals what allocators already knew: creative leadership now optimizes for speed and data fluency over craft and client relationships. The agencies that replace his influence will do it with six people and $2.4m in MarTech spend, not one expensive brain.
French's final Droga5 credit—an IWC campaign launched December 2024—will likely outperform the next four quarters of work his successors produce. That lag is the asset WPP just wrote off.