Accenture Song acquired Whalar Group, the London-founded creator agency with offices in New York and Los Angeles, in a transaction pegged by industry sources at north of $300 million. The deal brings 2,000 creators under management and Whalar's proprietary platform into Accenture's global advisory stack, marking the largest creator-marketing acquisition by a Tier 1 consultancy.
Whalar operates a dual model: managed creator relationships for brands including Unilever, Google, and Amazon, plus a SaaS platform that handles campaign briefs, compliance, and payment rails. The company reported $78 million in revenue for the twelve months ending September 2024, growing 34% year-over-year, with EBITDA margins in the low teens. Whalar employs 220 full-time staff. Terms were not disclosed, but the acquisition includes earnouts tied to 2025-2026 revenue milestones. Founders Neil Waller and James Street will join Accenture Song's global leadership, reporting directly to Managing Director David Droga.
This matters because it redefines creator marketing from media-buying adjacency to core enterprise capability. Accenture clients—Fortune 500 CMOs and procurement chiefs—now expect creator ecosystems governed with the same rigor as programmatic or retail media. The Whalar platform becomes infrastructure: API integrations with Salesforce Marketing Cloud, contract automation, FTC compliance workflows. Single-family offices allocating to luxury hospitality or heritage consumer brands increasingly ask their operators, "Who manages your creator stack?" This acquisition provides the answer consultancies can now staff internally.
The signal extends beyond Accenture. Publicis acquired Influential for $500 million in late 2023. WPP has spent $180 million on creator-adjacent acquisitions since 2022. Dentsu folded its creator offerings into a unified division in Q3 2024. The pattern is clear: holding companies are no longer renting creator access, they are buying the rails. Whalar's 2,000 managed relationships now sit inside the same legal entity advising on multi-billion-dollar media strategies, giving Accenture pricing power and data access competitors must negotiate case-by-case.
Operators should watch how Accenture integrates Whalar's platform into Salesforce and Adobe deployments by mid-2025. Heritage brands reliant on third-party creator networks face a choice: build proprietary stacks or accept that their agency now controls the talent layer. Expect Accenture to push platform licensing to non-competitive clients by Q2 2025, turning Whalar's tech into a profit center separate from managed services. Allocators in luxury and travel should also note that Whalar's hospitality client roster—including Four Seasons and Rosewood—now shares data infrastructure with Accenture's broader advisory book, creating potential for portfolio-level creator strategies.
The deal closes in Q1 2025, subject to standard regulatory clearance. Whalar's London headquarters will remain operational, with expansion into Singapore and Dubai expected by year-end.