"Our business here (India) is just under $600 million of revenues. So, we are very aggressive in terms of growth. We will grow in India this year by 10 per cent in terms of revenue. It's a strong picture and our business is doing pretty well across the board," WPP CEO Martin Sorrell said recently.
The company, with a global revenue of $19 billion, follows January-December financial year.
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The WPP group operates a host of businesses in India, including agencies like O&M, JWT, GroupM, the Kantar Group and Grey Worldwide.
Sorrell felt that India has more room to grow as its revenue stood at just $600 million compared with WPP's China share of $1.6 billion.
"Our number is $1.6 billion in China, the third-largest market. In India, we have a 45 per cent market share with under $600 million revenue, which ranks nine on WPP's country list.
"India is under-branded as a proportion of GDP it's too low. It's going to get higher," he said.
WPP's brand communication agency Cohn and Wolfe recently acquired a majority stake in public relations firm Six Degrees PR.
In India, however, Sorrell said, the group will rely more on the organic route to drive growth.
TAM India, the JV between Nielsen and WPP's Kantar, recently formed an alliance with television rating agency Broadcast Audience Research Council (BARC) India for a separate meter management company, which Sorrell termed as "a good idea".
"The problem is when you have two systems, it usually doesn't work for either of the systems. Both companies (TAM and BARC India) thought it would be a good idea to put together one system," he added.
He felt that although digital advertising globally is on the rise, there has been a slight shift towards traditional media recently.
"I think the pendulum is sort of swinging back a bit to traditional media," he said.