Accenture Song announced its acquisition of Superdigital, a U.S.-based social and influencer agency, within weeks of closing its purchase of Whalar. The timing—two creator-focused shops inside the same fiscal quarter—signals enterprise clients are no longer piloting influencer programs. They are embedding them in annual marketing architecture, and consultancies are racing to own the capacity.
Superdigital brings a roster concentrated in lifestyle, wellness, and direct-to-consumer verticals. Its operational model pairs creator networks with performance analytics, a combination that fits cleanly into Accenture Song's infrastructure play. Whalar, by contrast, skews entertainment and tech brand partnerships, with a global footprint across 15 markets. The two acquisitions do not overlap—they bracket. One handles volume and conversion optimization. The other manages talent relationships at portfolio scale. Accenture now controls both ends of the creator-marketing value chain within a single P&L.
The move reflects a structural shift in how Fortune 500 marketing budgets are being recomposed. Traditional media agencies have treated influencer work as a bolt-on service, farmed out to specialist partners or handled by junior teams. Accenture is positioning creator strategy as a core capability, seated inside the same org chart as CRM buildouts and e-commerce platform migrations. That architectural choice matters. It means influencer campaigns will be designed alongside loyalty programs and personalization engines, not after the media plan is finalized. The result is tighter attribution loops and better return on incremental spend—exactly what CFOs require before approving eight-figure social budgets.
The timing also reveals urgency. Accenture did not wait to integrate Whalar before announcing Superdigital. That suggests the firm is buying ahead of a talent squeeze. Independent creator agencies are now acquisition targets for holding companies, private equity platforms, and consultancies simultaneously. Prices are rising. Multiples on EBITDA for top-tier shops have moved from 4-6x to 8-10x in eighteen months, according to investment bankers working the space. Accenture is locking in capacity while the market is still fragmented.
Operators should watch three developments over the next six to nine months. First, whether Accenture Song integrates both agencies under a single creator-services brand or keeps them as distinct operating units. Second, if the firm begins pitching combined creator-plus-CRM packages to CPG and pharma clients, where influencer ROI has historically been harder to demonstrate. Third, how WPP, Publicis, and Omnicom respond—each has made smaller creator acquisitions, but none have moved at this pace.
The dual acquisition is not a hedge. It is a declaration that creator marketing has crossed from innovation budget to operational infrastructure. Accenture is not building an experiment. It is building a category.