RPA Retains Honda Creative Account, Mullen Snags Acura; MediaVest Wins Media
Much-Watched Auto Review Wraps Up With Surprises
American Honda Motor Co.
has selected Los Angeles-based RPA as its creative agency on the Honda
business, Boston-based Mullen for Acura and hired Publicis Groupe's
MediaVest as its new media agency.
There's been an emotional component, too, as the outcome would weigh heavily on the fate of its incumbent of 27 years, RPA.
The review began in December, and Honda tapped search consultancy Roth Associates to manage the process. RPA was invited to defend both creative and media duties, according to people familiar with the pitch.
Three other creative agencies advanced to the final round of the pitch. They were MDC Partners' 72andSunny and Interpublic Group of Cos.' Mullen and The Martin Agency. Meanwhile, media agencies that participated in the final round of the review included independent Horizon, Publicis Groupe's MediaVest and Omnicom's PHD.
For RPA, the change is not fatal. But it will surely trim down an agency with so much invested in the account. The shop took on the Honda brand business when it opened its doors in 1986; in 1999 Honda consolidated its Acura media and creative business there as well. Founders Gerry Rubin and Larry Postaer launched the firm out of what was Honda's agency group within Needham, Los Angeles, after Needham Harper & Steers merged with Omnicom. Since its inception, the firm has added a handful of accounts, including Farmer's Insurance and La-Z-Boy. But executives familiar with the matter have said that the Honda account still accounts for more than 50% of the agency's business.
For Mullen, picking up the Acura brand is a huge opportunity to help the Interpublic shop continue its trajectory from an East coast mainstay to a formidable national agency. The shop, which was on Ad Age's A-List in 2013 representing the best ad agencies in the country, has been on a new business tear of late. Other clients it added this year include Coca-Cola's Honest Tea, American Greetings and SquareTrade.
For MediaVest the win means that media agency network Starcom Mediavest Group is getting back into the automotive game only a year after Chicago-based Starcom lost its multi-billion-dollar General Motors business to Aegis' Carat.
Honda had been running a concurrent pitch for dealer business, and in December MediaVest also won the media-buying and planning business for a group of Honda dealers in New York's tristate area. Publicis Kaplan Thaler picked up the creative portion of that pitch.
sardar singh
pgdm 2nd sem
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