Omnicom enters its first earnings cycle after the IPG acquisition with scale, momentum, and unresolved operational challenges. CMOs should ignore Wall Street’s fixation on quarterly performance and instead evaluate how Omnicom plans to convert its expanded capabilities into customer growth. Despite its new size, the company still faces the same structural barriers constraining the broader marketing services industry: accumulating tech debt, creative decline, and siloed execution. The question now is whether Omnicom can turn its integrated portfolio into tangible outcomes for clients. For CMOs, it’s grow time. For those currently or considering working with Omnicom Group, consider the following:

  1. Turn agency technology debt into CMO advantage. CMOs can reap the proceeds but not foot the entire bill when their agencies spend heavily on AI technologies. AI investments often lead to new capabilities, expertise, and more effective marketing. For example, companies have reported improvements to advertising click-through rates ranging from 50–70% resulting from scaled localization using AI. Analysis of Omnicom’s 10-Ks, annual reports, and earnings since the official launch of Omni AI in 2018 imply technology investments in the billions, inclusive of acquisitions like Flywheel Digital. CMOs pursuing AI marketing proficiency could consider Omnicom and Omni AI as a mechanism to subsidize their own martech spending while building valuable AI expertise and experience. Look for Omni AI announcements about enterprise (tech plus services) and self-serve (tech only) use cases in the near future.
  2. Unlock creative atrophy through intelligent creativity. CMOs face rising costs and diminishing returns from traditional, intuition‑led creative development. They can reverse this atrophy by scaling intelligent creativity — the fusion of data, technology, and human ingenuity — across creative services resources. Omnicom Precision Marketing Group (OPMG) already demonstrates how data‑led creative models deliver coherence, performance, and speed across the full funnel. CMOs who need scalable, performance‑anchored creative should evaluate how OPMG’s approach can be replicated across other Omnicom agencies. Watch for Omnicom to continue to restructure legacy creative networks into horizontal, integrated creative services that blend brand and performance into unified, full‑funnel output.
  3. Compound performance by aligning production and media. CMOs struggle to match campaign velocity with the volume and precision required by modern media investment. Structurally linking content production with media management enables creative assets to be generated, versioned, and optimized at the speed of impression delivery and by the same intelligence layer. Research from Google shows that 70% of optimization potential lies in creative quality, a gap that integrated production and media operations can close. CMOs pursuing cost savings from asset reuse and performance gains from tighter creative/media alignment should assess how Omnicom Production and Omnicom Media Group operate together. Expect expanded integration announcements that tie content supply chains directly to media planning, buying, and optimization.

The bottom line? Wall Street’s financial considerations are not CMOs’ marketing and business priorities. Wall Street’s first financial report card on Omnicom’s integration with IPG is only part of the story and may miss the mark. After Publicis Groupe reported strong Q4 2025 results and upped its guidance, Wall Street slashed 8–9% of the holding company’s value. Apollo Global Management and Bain Capital walked away from Dentsu partner discussions, ignoring the powerful combination of Dentsu Media, Merkle, and the Merkury platform. So brush off the earnings hyperbole (for this agency and others) and focus on what agencies offer that makes your business grow.

If you’re a Forrester client and interested in learning more, set up an inquiry or guidance session or email me at jpattisall@forrester.com.