Guest Profile  ·  Media  ·  AI  ·  Growth

The Growth Engine

Andrew McCormick is former Chief Growth Officer at dentsu X, the dentsu group’s global media network. Twenty years from journalism at New Media Age, through editorial roles at Haymarket and The Knowledge Engineers, into agency growth leadership at Essence and then at dentsu X from 2019.

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The Business of Marketing Season 5  ·  Episode 79  ·  30 min

“Mission. Ambition. Culture. The three pillars of a successful agency.”

Andrew McCormick is former Chief Growth Officer at dentsu X, the dentsu group’s global media network and the only major network born in Asia. Twenty years of career across journalism, editorial and agency growth, and one of the clearer voices on what separates agencies that compound from agencies that churn.

McCormick began his career in journalism, covering the media and marketing industries as a reporter at New Media Age from 2005 to 2007. He was there when Facebook opened its first office outside the United States, in London; by his own account he spent time persuading his editor that a new technology called social networking would turn out to matter.

Four years as Deputy Editor of Marketing and Editor of Revolution at Haymarket Publishing, then three years as Editorial Director at The Knowledge Engineers, gave him a platform-level view of the agency and brand ecosystem. In 2014 he moved agency-side, joining Essence as VP of Marketing and Business Development EMEA during the agency’s start-up years; Essence’s mission, to make advertising more valuable to the world, remains the illustration he reaches for when explaining what agency mission looks like in practice.

He joined dentsu X in 2019 and spent seven years in senior growth leadership, most recently as Chief Growth Officer, helping dentsu X grow in Europe and the Americas off the back of a network that originated in Asia. He talks frequently about the Wanamaker formulation applied to AI: fifty percent of the current capability, he believes, is overhyped, and the industry does not yet know which fifty percent.

21 years
2019–Now
dentsu X
Seven years in senior growth leadership at dentsu X, most recently as Chief Growth Officer. Helping the dentsu group’s global media network grow across Europe and the Americas, off the foundation of a network born in Asia.
2014–2019
Essence
VP of Marketing and Business Development EMEA during the agency’s start-up years. Led marketing activity and business growth across the region around a mission to make advertising more valuable to the world.
2011–2014
The Knowledge Engineers
Editorial Director for three years, shaping content and thought leadership for marketing and media education.
2007–2011
Haymarket Publishing
Deputy Editor of Marketing and Editor of Revolution across four and a half years. Covering brand, agency and commercial marketing at the top of the UK trade press.
2005–2007
New Media Age
Reporter and self-appointed social networking correspondent. Wrote the story about Facebook opening its first office outside the US in London, as the social web was still being called social networking.
21Years Across Journalism, Editorial and Agency Growth
7Years at dentsu X Leading Global Growth
5Publishing, Editorial and Agency Homes Before dentsu X

“The best client you can have is one you already have.”

How he thinks 03 convictions
01Mission, ambition and culture are the three pillars of a successful agency

“Essence’s mission was to make advertising more valuable to the world. That informed every decision we made.”

McCormick’s frame comes from Essence’s start-up years. Mission is the operating sentence a whole company can measure itself against. Ambition is the stretch goal that is reachable only with real effort, so that arrival can be celebrated. Culture is the people equation everything else compounds on top of. Agencies chasing growth numbers without those three tend to be fragile, and the founders he respects most can recite all three from memory.

02Outcomes are the new remuneration model

“A good agency today leads every proposal with an outcome-based model. If growth doesn’t land, we don’t get paid.”

McCormick’s observation from years of CMO conversations is that output-priced fees turn agency work into a cost centre in the CFO’s eye. Outcome-based remuneration puts the agency and the client on the same side of the table: pay for the growth that lands, and only the growth that lands. He argues the best agencies lead their new-business proposals with outcome-based models because it forces both sides to define success up front.

03Fifty percent of AI is overhyped. We just don’t know which fifty

“AI is the biggest change in our lifetime for marketing. And 50 percent of it is overhyped. We just don’t yet know which 50 percent.”

McCormick applies the Wanamaker formulation to AI, by his own admission as a self-described anti-hype guy. He still frames AI as categorically different from the digital or retail-media waves: digital hit performance first, retail media hit point-of-sale, AI touches every process. Search engine marketing, he argues, is the first discipline being meaningfully rewritten. The commercial question for every agency is which tools in the current stack will still be in use five years from now.

Hear Andrew on
The Business of Marketing
Season 5Episode 7930 min