By Daryl Lang, with reporting by Noreen O'Leary of Adweek
Omnicom Group, the owner of several major creative agencies
including BBDO, DDB, and TBWA, has begun strict new enforcement of
sequential liability clauses in contracts.
Under new standard language being introduced in Omnicom contracts,
ad agencies will no longer assume liability for a project if a
client doesn't pay. This could force a photographer to eat the cost
of an ad shoot if a troubled advertiser fails to pay an ad
agency.
Sequential liability was put into place 20 years ago to protect
agencies from unpaid bills, but until now individual agencies have
had some flexibility in enforcing it. The stepped-up enforcement is
apparently related to big advertisers, including General Motors and
InBev, who are reeling from the credit crisis and have been
insisting on longer payment terms.
Trade groups that represent ad producers are not pleased. The
American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP) issued an advisory
to photographers March 18. In addition to the new sequential
liability clause, ASMP said photographers are not being paid
advances on Omnicom assignments.
“These terms and conditions are simply not in the best interests of
photographers, producers or clients,” the ASMP said. “This action,
clearly taken in anticipation of increasingly difficult financial
conditions is a unilateral effort to shift the burden onto those
who are least prepared to bear it.”
“ASMP would recommend that photographers include in their paperwork
a statement making it clear that there will be no grant of
copyright license until all related assignment invoices are paid in
full,” the statement continued.
The ASMP acknowledged there was no incentive for agencies to make
photographer-friendly changes to their contracts if photographers
were willing to accept the terms, and urged photographers to raise
the issue on blogs and social networking sites. “The issue needs to
become viral and requires significant support from key
photographers in order to gain traction and effect change,” the
ASMP note said.
In the U.K., Omnicom suspended the new sequential liability
requirement after its senior agency managers met with the local
trade group Advertising Producers Association.
Commercial production executives told
Adweek that Omnicom is
the first major ad agency holding company to tighten contract
terms. Representatives at Interpublic Group of Companies, WPP Group
and Publicis Groupe said their companies have not yet demanded
sequential liability clauses in commercial production
contracts.
Omnicom agency insiders confirmed the change in language in all
agency contracts. Production company sources told
Adweek
that contracts within Omnicom vary and while they may have had
sequential liability clauses in them, in the past they were often
ignored or removed at the operating units.
Amid the severe credit crunch, Omnicom clients are extending their
own payment terms to ad agencies – DDB Worldwide client
Anheuser-Busch's parent InBev is insisting on 120-day terms – and
the holding company’s agencies are caught in the middle.
General Motors has told its ad agencies that
it may take 60 to 75 days to pay invoices, according to an ad
agency e-mail provided to
PDN by an automotive photographer.
GM, which is fighting to stay out of bankruptcy, was America’s
second-largest advertiser last year.
Related links
Adweek: Omnicom Enforces Production Contracts
ASMP
Statement
Advertising Photographers Alerted to Omnicom’s New Payment Terms
March 18, 2009
By Daryl Lang, with reporting by Noreen O'Leary of Adweek
Omnicom Group, the owner of several major creative agencies including BBDO, DDB, and TBWA, has begun strict new enforcement of sequential liability clauses in contracts.
Under new standard language being introduced in Omnicom contracts, ad agencies will no longer assume liability for a project if a client doesn't pay. This could force a photographer to eat the cost of an ad shoot if a troubled advertiser fails to pay an ad agency.
Sequential liability was put into place 20 years ago to protect agencies from unpaid bills, but until now individual agencies have had some flexibility in enforcing it. The stepped-up enforcement is apparently related to big advertisers, including General Motors and InBev, who are reeling from the credit crisis and have been insisting on longer payment terms.
Trade groups that represent ad producers are not pleased. The American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP) issued an advisory to photographers March 18. In addition to the new sequential liability clause, ASMP said photographers are not being paid advances on Omnicom assignments.
“These terms and conditions are simply not in the best interests of photographers, producers or clients,” the ASMP said. “This action, clearly taken in anticipation of increasingly difficult financial conditions is a unilateral effort to shift the burden onto those who are least prepared to bear it.”
“ASMP would recommend that photographers include in their paperwork a statement making it clear that there will be no grant of copyright license until all related assignment invoices are paid in full,” the statement continued.
The ASMP acknowledged there was no incentive for agencies to make photographer-friendly changes to their contracts if photographers were willing to accept the terms, and urged photographers to raise the issue on blogs and social networking sites. “The issue needs to become viral and requires significant support from key photographers in order to gain traction and effect change,” the ASMP note said.
In the U.K., Omnicom suspended the new sequential liability requirement after its senior agency managers met with the local trade group Advertising Producers Association.
Commercial production executives told
Adweek that Omnicom is the first major ad agency holding company to tighten contract terms. Representatives at Interpublic Group of Companies, WPP Group and Publicis Groupe said their companies have not yet demanded sequential liability clauses in commercial production contracts.
Omnicom agency insiders confirmed the change in language in all agency contracts. Production company sources told
Adweek that contracts within Omnicom vary and while they may have had sequential liability clauses in them, in the past they were often ignored or removed at the operating units.
Amid the severe credit crunch, Omnicom clients are extending their own payment terms to ad agencies – DDB Worldwide client Anheuser-Busch's parent InBev is insisting on 120-day terms – and the holding company’s agencies are caught in the middle.
General Motors has told its ad agencies that
it may take 60 to 75 days to pay invoices, according to an ad agency e-mail provided to
PDN by an automotive photographer. GM, which is fighting to stay out of bankruptcy, was America’s second-largest advertiser last year.
Related links
Adweek: Omnicom Enforces Production Contracts
ASMP Statement