After parting with Wieden & Kennedy and trying WPP’s Berlin Cameron, Procter & Gamble Co. has landed on doing most of its work for Secret deodorant in house—saving a lot of money in the process.
Speaking at a Deutsche Bank investor conference in Paris on Thursday, P&G Vice Chairman-Chief Financial Officer Jon Moeller said Secret “no longer has an agency of record. The brand team has become its own agency, bringing in nearly all advertising creation and media planning.”
P&G reviewed the creative account earlier this year after parting ways with Wieden, and Berlin Cameron has handled some recent brand work on a project basis.