The news: A growing number of ad agency professionals are fearful of their job security as the industry consolidates. A recent Adweek survey found that 29% of agency workers believe industry consolidation will negatively impact their jobs, and over one-third are actively considering leaving the industry altogether.
These concerns are emerging alongside mounting operational and financial pressure.
- Employment at US ad agencies dropped 3% between March 2023 and March 2025, outpacing the broader professional services category. At the same time, 79% of marketing decision-makers say planning is harder in 2025 than a year ago, with 27% cutting back ad budgets due to tariffs and economic turbulence.
- Slow hiring adds another layer of concern. Hiring ranks low among agency priorities (17.8%), per SparkToro while talent retention is a top challenge for 22.8% of senior leaders, per Basis Technologies. Even more telling, just 9.3% of agencies cite company culture as a key issue—a surprising blind spot at a time when industry-wide restructuring is underway.
Why it matters: The agency world is consolidating and transforming quickly—and the pressure is being felt from the ground up. Employee morale is slipping just as agencies grapple with tighter margins, shifting trends, and cautious clients. While M&A could unlock efficiencies, poor execution could worsen internal disarray and stall momentum.
There’s a growing gap between leadership priorities—efficiency, cost control, profitability—and employee realities of AI-fueled job insecurity, unclear paths forward, and eroding trust. Agencies may be trimming overhead, but if they overlook the cultural fallout, they risk weakening the core of their value proposition and losing key talent.
Our take: Agency leaders must realize that transformation strategies only succeed when employees believe in them. When agencies merge or restructure, they must invest in culture and clear communication—or risk losing employee trust and struggling to retain top talent over time.
That only 9.3% of agencies view culture as a priority is striking. Leaders are racing to modernize with AI, commerce, and scale—but if their teams don’t want to be part of that future, it won’t matter. Retention isn’t a soft metric; it’s a structural necessity.
In a business defined by people and ideas, the real integration challenge isn’t just merging operations or tech. It’s aligning leadership vision with the workforce expected to carry it out. And if that’s not addressed soon, many agencies may find themselves growing leaner—and lonelier—than they intended.