Sir Martin Sorrell used S4 Capital's earnings call to argue that Accenture should acquire WPP, the holding company he built over three decades before departing in 2018. The comment—directed at investors and analysts, not Accenture's board—marks the first time a major agency founder has publicly prescribed acquisition-by-consultancy as the logical endgame for a competitor he once ran. WPP's market capitalization sits near £7.8 billion as of March 2025. Accenture's is $239 billion.
Sorrell framed the suggestion as structural inevitability, not speculation. Traditional holding companies face sustained revenue pressure from three directions: in-housing by consumer brands, fee compression in media buying, and the substitution of creative services by technology platforms that bundle production into martech stacks. WPP reported organic revenue decline of 1.3 percent in Q4 2024. Publicis Groupe, the only peer to post growth, did so by expanding Epsilon's data-services arm, not traditional creative. Sorrell's diagnosis: holding companies that cannot pivot to technology-led services have no path to organic recovery and no appealing strategic options outside M&A by larger consulting firms.
The significance is twofold. First, Sorrell's public positioning accelerates the narrative that legacy agencies are acquisition targets rather than consolidators. Private-equity appetite for creative businesses has cooled since 2021, when mid-market shops commanded 10-12x EBITDA multiples. Those valuations have compressed to 6-8x as procurement departments demand lower fees and brands question the ROI of external creative beyond performance marketing. If Accenture or Deloitte were to acquire WPP, the deal would likely value creative and media units below replacement cost, treating them as client-access vehicles rather than standalone profit centers. Second, Sorrell's framing signals that S4 Capital—his own venture—will not pursue roll-up M&A of legacy peers. S4's model relies on technology integration, not consolidating creative P&Ls. That leaves WPP, Omnicom, IPG, and Havas with fewer buyers and narrower paths to scale.
Allocators should watch three developments. First, whether Accenture or Deloitte publicly respond to Sorrell's suggestion by year-end 2025. Silence would confirm consultancies see limited value in creative assets; engagement would signal a shift in how they plan to compete for CMO budgets. Second, whether WPP's board initiates a strategic review in the next six months. CEO Mark Read has resisted breakup talk, but sustained revenue decline and Sorrell's comments increase pressure from activist investors. Third, whether S4 Capital divests its creative units to focus entirely on technology and data services. Sorrell has hinted at this in prior calls. A move in Q3 or Q4 2025 would confirm that even digitally native agencies see creative as a liability, not an asset.
Accenture acquired Droga5 in 2019 for an undisclosed sum, adding a creative flagship without integrating holding-company infrastructure. If it were to buy WPP, it would likely keep only the data, media-tech, and client-relationship layers, spinning or shuttering legacy creative networks. That outcome would make Sorrell's suggestion less a prediction than a blueprint.