Hello, thank you for standing by. My name is Regina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Omnicom Acquisition of Interpublic Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, press star one again. I would now like to turn the conference over to Greg Lundberg, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you for joining our call today to discuss the combination of Omnicom and Interpublic. On our websites, OMC.com and Interpublic.com, you will find the press release and presentation covering the information we'll review today. Slide two of the presentation shows the participants on today's call, including John Wren, Chairman and CEO of Omnicom, Philippe Krakowsky, CEO and Director of Interpublic, Phil Angelastro, EVP and CFO of Omnicom, and Ellen Johnson, EVP and CFO of Interpublic. Before we start, I'd like to remind everyone to read the note on forward-looking statements, including at the beginning of the investor presentation and in the press release. Certain of the statements made today may constitute forward-looking statements, and these statements are the present expectations of the companies.
Relevant factors that could cause actual results to differ materially are listed in the note on forward-looking statements and in both companies' latest annual reports on Form 10-K and subsequent SEC filings. During the course of today's call, we will also discuss certain non-GAAP measures. These non-GAAP measures are not intended to be a substitute for and should not be considered in isolation from the financial measures reported in accordance with GAAP by each of Omnicom and Interpublic in their filings with the SEC. I will now hand the call over to John.
Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today on such short notice. We're excited to announce that Omnicom has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire IPG in an all-stock transaction. This strategic combination creates significant opportunities for growth for our people, our clients, and our shareholders. We're excited to welcome Philippe and the entire IPG team to the Omnicom family. I'll first discuss the transaction highlights. Omnicom's acquisition of IPG is structured as a stock-for-stock merger, with IPG shareholders receiving 0.344 Omnicom shares for each IPG share they own. Post-closing, Omnicom and Interpublic shareholders will own 60.6% and 39.4%, respectively, of the combined entity. The transaction will be accretive to earnings per share for both Omnicom and Interpublic shareholders. We expect to realize $750 million of cost synergies, with a majority achievable within 24 months of the closing.
We will also expand offerings, creating greater opportunities for revenue growth. Finally, the combined company will generate over $3 billion in free cash flow, and we will continue Omnicom's practice for use of cash, dividends, acquisitions, and share repurchases. The transaction has compelling strategic merits. Interpublic and Omnicom have highly complementary assets that will come together to create an unmatched portfolio of services and products that expand the client opportunities for each company day one. The two companies also share highly complementary cultures and core values, including a foundational belief that the power of ideas is enabled by technology and data. This is just the start of how this combination will drive our growth. We jointly pursue this transaction because we believe it's an opportunity to move faster and innovate more, fueling accelerated growth.
Combining our capabilities, we will create an industry-leading identity solution platform with the most comprehensive understanding of consumer behaviors and transactions, resulting in superior outcomes for our clients. It will also advance our ability to continually innovate and develop new products and services that increase the ROI on marketing spend. With our significant free cash flow, we can leverage every dollar we invest across a much larger business and client base, allowing us to make internal investments and acquisitions to further drive growth. Together, we will be the premier marketing and sales company for a new era of marketing, strongly positioned to serve our existing clients and win new ones, drive innovation, and deliver long-term value. The combination will bring together unmatched talent, services, and products and platforms. Omnicom will have the deepest bench of marketing talent with over 100,000 practitioners.
It will have the most complete offering across media, precision marketing, CRM, data, digital commerce, advertising, healthcare, public relations, and branding. These services will be underpinned by Omni, Interact, Acxiom, and Flywheel, a combination that will effectively position the organization to thrive in an AI-driven future. Before I hand it over to Philippe, I want to talk about the people that make our business run. As we look ahead, it will be more important than ever to have the best people to create solutions that help our clients drive growth. Each of our two organizations has exceptionally talented people who are recognized every year for their creativity, innovation, and effectiveness. Omnicom will remain committed to being the home for the best talent in the industry, and this transaction will create many new opportunities for our teams.
As one company, we will have a unique ability to bring our clients' expert talent for their specific needs wherever they are in the world. Overall, we're most excited about the opportunities for growth provided by this combination and the benefits it will provide our people, clients, and shareholders. I'd now turn it over to Philippe, who will give you his perspectives on the strategic growth opportunities for this transaction and talk in more detail about what the transaction means for our technology platform.
Thanks, John. I want to echo what you said earlier. We also believe this transaction represents a tremendous strategic opportunity for both organizations. We're extremely proud of the capabilities we've built across IPG, our exceptional talent pool, and the roster of great clients who we work side by side with every day. By combining our capabilities with Omnicom's, we believe we can create a uniquely positioned company with highly complementary assets, platform capabilities, and the best expertise across all channels and geographies, which in turn will result in exceptional growth and long-term value creation for shareholders. As we considered the industry landscape and a range of options for becoming an even more powerful partner to marketers in a world that's changing at speed, the combination we are announcing today stood out.
Along with the best tools and talent, a comprehensive portfolio that covers the broadest range of marketing and sales activities, and a commitment to invest in data, commerce, and AI, our companies also share highly complementary cultures, which will be vital in bringing together our two outstanding organizations. An area which John and I have spent quite a bit of time discussing in thinking strategically about joining forces is the potential for our combined technology platforms to help us drive better outcomes for clients. To begin, we know that Omni and Interact, our respective enterprise operating systems, which seamlessly connect clients and agency teams across the entire marketing workflow to enable real-time collaboration, are each industry-leading platforms. Using expansive behavioral data on consumers, we can help clients build a view of their customer and prospect that informs every stage of the marketing life cycle.
Omnicom has built an extremely powerful platform with Omni, and we are excited about the capabilities we have built in Interact. We know there are significant opportunities to combining the best of each. When Omnicom acquired Flywheel earlier this year, they added a leading real-time transactional data asset, allowing them to measure online sales generated from media campaigns across the full marketing funnel in order to inform clients on next best actions across both sales and marketing. As you know, our acquisition of Acxiom brought best-in-class capabilities in identity, analytics, and first-party data management into IPG. Those are skill sets which have never been more relevant than in an era of GenAI and mass personalization.
By integrating Acxiom's identity graph, Flywheel's transactional data, and Omni and Interact's behavioral data and operating platforms, all driven by AI, the combined company will be able to create the most comprehensive and detailed view of a client's consumers at every step in their engagement journey. With brands across all client categories, we'll be able to deliver real-time insights and support real-time collaboration between our colleagues and clients to create highly effective and personalized experiences at speed, at scale, and in real time. This core engine of assets will then inform a much larger organization, set of capabilities, and clients to deliver outstanding marketplace outcomes, and now, let me pass things back to John.
Thank you, Philippe. I'll now turn it over to Phil, who will go into more detail on the transaction, and I will then be back for some closing remarks.
Thank you, John. Good morning, everyone. Let me add my personal welcome to Philippe and Ellen and the entire Interpublic team. We're excited about the strategic benefits of the combination, as well as the financial benefits it will bring. Together, we expect to generate significant operating cost synergies, as well as incremental revenue growth across the many areas John discussed in his remarks. The transaction is structured as an acquisition by Omnicom of Interpublic through an all-stock combination, with the shares owned 60.6% by Omnicom shareholders and 39.4% by Interpublic shareholders. The shares will continue to be traded on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol OMC. On a pro forma combined basis, as of December 6, 2024, our equity market capitalization would be approximately $31 billion. Omnicom's balance sheet will remain very strong. We're an investment-grade credit and intend to remain so.
There are no change of control issues in the assumption of Interpublic's debt by Omnicom. The transaction is deleveraging to Omnicom, with pro forma combined total debt to LTM EBITDA at September 30, 2024, of 2.1 times compared to standalone leverage of 2.5 times at September 30, 2024. Both ratios exclude the $750 million bond we retired on November 1, 2024. To be clear, these leverage ratios exclude run rate synergies. Our combined maturity schedule is reasonable and manageable. The transaction has been unanimously approved by the board of directors of both Omnicom and Interpublic. Closing is conditional upon customary regulatory approvals, shareholder votes of both companies, and other customary approvals. We expect to close in the second half of 2025. Let's now turn to slide 12 for a look at some key numbers on a combined basis for fiscal year 2023.
Together, the new Omnicom would generate $25.6 billion in revenue, $3.9 billion in Adjusted EBITDA, $2.7 billion in net income, and $3.3 billion of free cash flow. Slide 13 illustrates combined revenue by discipline for 2023 and for the nine months ended September 30, 2024. We've mapped our initial view of Interpublic's business to the most relevant disciplines in Omnicom's presentation. Notable here is that media and advertising and precision marketing on a combined basis represent a similar portion of our businesses today, as does public relations, and our combined healthcare discipline increases a bit as a percentage of the total. Overall, we will have a larger amount of revenue in our faster-growing disciplines, which has long been our investment strategy. Slide 14 is our revenue by geography for the same two periods.
The new Omnicom becomes favorably more weighted to the United States at 57% of revenue compared to 51% previously, with less exposure to both Europe and Asia-Pacific. Overall, our geographic footprint remains well-diversified across regions. Slide 15 highlights some of our key financial metrics, some of which I mentioned earlier. For both the 2023 and year-to-date 2024 periods, the level of Omnicom's Adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow increases significantly. Omnicom operates with a higher Adjusted EBITDA margin relative to Interpublic, resulting in a combined 2023 Adjusted EBITDA margin of 15.1% before synergies versus 15.6% currently. We expect the incremental growth and cost synergies created from the combination will give us the opportunity to bring this combined margin to its historical Omnicom levels and beyond. Let's look at the cost synergy opportunity on slide 16. We believe that there are $750 million of clearly identified opportunities.
In bringing together two large public companies, there will be opportunities to streamline the organization and capture efficiencies. We also expect to realize savings through the alignment of our complementary businesses across disciplines, which will also provide a platform for realizing new revenue growth opportunities. To clarify, we have not included any revenue growth opportunities in our $750 million synergy amount. We also expect to achieve savings by eliminating duplicative spend with third-party vendors, as well as combining our real estate footprint, leveraging shared service centers, and driving automation and offshoring. Finally, we expect synergies and efficiencies from leveraging our future technology platform and AI investments across our expanded business and client base. We expect a significant majority of these $750 million in cost synergies to be achieved within 24 months of closing, with completion within 36 months.
We expect to incur approximately $450 million in one-time cash costs to achieve them. I'll conclude my remarks with the capital allocation policy on slide 17. Throughout Omnicom's history, we've returned a significant amount of our earnings to shareholders. We expect to continue our consistent approach to capital allocation. Our combined cash flow of $3 billion will allow us to continue to pay a substantial dividend, pursue accretive acquisitions, and return the balance to shareholders through share buybacks. We plan to maintain Omnicom's dividend of $0.70 per share in the combined company. Thank you.
Thank you, Phil, and thanks again, everyone, for joining us today and listening to our call. I hope you share our excitement on the future opportunities for growth we are creating by bringing the two companies together. We'll now open the call for questions.
At this time, I'd like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star, followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. Our first question comes from the line of David Karnovsky with JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for the question and congrats on the deal. John, roughly 10 years ago, you attempted to merge your firm with another hold co. I'm wondering what lessons learned there applied to this deal. What gives you confidence you won't see some of the same challenges this time around? And more specifically, how are you planning to address kind of any risks around other agencies looking to use the interim transaction timeline to compete for talent or clients?
Certainly. Well, 10, 11 years ago, when we entertained the combination with Publicis, I suspect, looking in hindsight, the move to consolidate within the industry made a hell of a lot of sense because if you look at what's happened to both companies and our performance since then, it did make a lot of sense. It didn't come together for lots of reasons. I think Philippe probably touched on it in part of his comments in that the difference this time around is if you look at Interpublic and you look at Omnicom, you look at the people that make it up, not the leadership, including the leadership, we actually share core values. And we have since the creation of both groups. Also, I think that there's quite a number of people in each of the companies that have spent time in the other company over their careers.
A lot of the cultural unspoken things that get in the way of doing these things successfully, it was a decade ago, and I can only remember the positive things at this point, but they got in the way. Philippe and I have been in conversations, he can chime in, for almost a year now.
Yeah, we've been talking about this for a bit.
Having had that experience and putting myself in the situation where this is only going to be tried twice, and both times by me, it took a lot of time and care, as did Philippe, to make certain that the lessons learned a decade ago are not going to be repeated. I'm very excited about the transaction and what we can do because a lot of time that I spent 11 years ago is not going to get repeated. We're just going to focus on how to make both companies even greater and create better opportunities for our employees and stakeholders. Your second question was risks of people coming in. For a sizable client, putting their business into review and putting their staff through changing their marketing partner is pretty complex.
So once you get past the emotion and the bluster of what gets said on a particular day and people sit down and examine who the best providers of our services are in the industry, I think someone would be hard-pressed to not conclude that the combination of the Interpublic assets with the Omnicom assets and the talented people that we have and the track record and our obsession of looking at the future rather than the past. I think it would be short-sighted for a big client to go through changing to a different vendor and discarding either of the two of us because we have to wait for a regulatory approval in order to get on with this. So could it happen? Yes. Will it happen? Yes. But I think people will be short-sighted in doing that. Finally, this group is truly forward-looking at this point.
Every decision that Philippe and I are going to make, and what that means is that we'll be able to provide the tools, the capabilities, because we have the cash flow to invest either internally or externally to get the resources that we need to create pretty incredible job opportunities for people entering this business and wanting to succeed in this business. So, again, people may choose to change their careers, but I'm not worried about any of our senior people doing that because I think both cultures and both leaders here are sensitive to making certain that we provide career opportunities for the best and the brightest in our employees.
Do you want to add anything to that question?
I was just thinking, look, if you think about both firms historically, to John's point, at the senior levels, we tend to have folks who build careers with us. And then anecdotally, we're obviously less than 24 hours in. But to the extent that you hear from the two constituencies that you called out, whether it's conversations with senior clients who see the benefits of this and definitely conversations with our own leadership, at least on our side, is real palpable excitement because being a part of what is now a platform, essentially a company with exceptional talent and reach and capabilities and knowing that you can bring those to bear for your client or that they're going to give you an opportunity, as John says, to build a more interesting career, there's a lot of enthusiasm for it inside our organization.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Jason Bazinet with Citigroup. Please go ahead.
I guess based on the timing that you guys are talking about for the close, you're not anticipating a protracted regulatory review process. And I was just wondering, do you mind just, because I know investors are just going to look at the top five holding companies and look at the market share and say, "Oh, there's big regulatory risks here." Do you mind just sort of, in qualitative terms, just unpacking why you might think the risks might be lower than what the knee-jerk reaction is going to be in terms of the regulators blocking this?
Along the path of the last year, we both took very serious legal advice to outstanding legal firms. You can never tell what regulators are going to do, but we are pretty confident that this is not going to create any regulatory issues as we go through and do a file of what we have to file and go through our processes we have to. We're a component in the marketing mix. The world isn't divided into four companies. You have things like Google, Facebook, Amazon, many other people who are participating at one level or another and servicing people's marketing needs. This move allows us to take control of our own future rather than wait for technology to impact it in ways that you can't anticipate today.
And also, there's reason to believe that the change in administration and the attitude towards business, at least Washington, D.C., in the U.S., will make it more friendly to business, especially when you have the compelling story that we have. But it's an unknown. We'll wait and see. But I think somebody referenced 10 years ago, and I think probably eight or nine months into that process, I'm going back in history, China was holding up the Publicis Omnicom merger. And I think on a first-quarter call, I forget which year it was, China was dragging this out and dragging it out. And I think I was asked by an analyst, "What's Omnicom's plan B?" And I said, "At that time, there wasn't a plan B." In this case, there is a plan B and C.
We have prepared for those contingencies, and we're prepared to do whatever we have to do to get regulatory approval. We're certainly prepared to take if we're required to act on parts of our portfolio. We would do that. But we're not anticipating it at this point.
That's super helpful. Thank you.
Our next question comes from the line of Steven Cahall with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning. You talked about the incremental revenue growth opportunities and the combined capabilities. I'd also imagine that you've had to identify some areas of client conflict. I think that's something that's come up in the past as well. I was just wondering if you could size for us maybe how you think about the incremental revenue growth, but also anything we need to think about in terms of the potential implications of client conflict and how you'll be able to go about dealing with that post the merger. John, you've come through a year with a lot of share gains, a lot of successful integration of Flywheel. You seem to be on the front foot. Why is now the right time to do this deal? You're issuing a lot of shares. You're paying a premium for your competitor.
So just wanted to know how we think about this as being offensive versus defensive. Thank you.
Okay. I've forgotten the first part of the question.
Client conflict.
I've got to watch what I say, but I may regret it, but it's really not the same issue that it was in the 1980s and the 1990s and the early 2000s. Clients have gotten far more sophisticated. I'm just curious. Can you hear me? Because we're getting.
I can hear you. Yep.
Okay. Good. Okay. We were getting feedback, static in the room, so I was just concerned, so client conflicts are really not the issue they were in the past. If you look through any of the portfolios of any of us, you're going to find that somebody who's—if an outsider would look at it, they'd say, "Isn't that a conflict? And doesn't it create issues for you?" These issues have been solved through various means and different solutions provided by every one of the companies, so I'm not aware of or threatened by any conflict as a result of us announcing that we're joining forces here. Are there clients that we have to sit down with in the coming weeks and months and assure them that we still love them quite as much as we did prior to this morning?
Yes, but clients are what drives us every morning when we wake up. So I'm not expecting anything. I don't know, Philippe, if you have a point of view on that.
No, I mean, I agree with John. It's a very different business. When you talk about what was 10 years ago or took a look at what you wrote this morning, I know that you tried to size it. The addressable universe for us, the nature of what we do for clients is much broader. It's much more core to their business when you think about, say, what a Flywheel does or what an Acxiom allows us to do and how close we get to kind of client's data, what's going on at the commerce side of things. And so I think that the nature of the partnerships has evolved. And to John's point, you clearly need to give people comfort if, for whatever reason, it's something that they bring up with you.
But it's clearly not the kind of issue it would have been five, 10 years ago, definitely a decade ago.
And the second part of your question is just, do you want to remind me? I've got two questions.
Yeah. Thanks. Just about the timing here because, John, it seemed like you all really had a lot of momentum. So we're just thinking about how you thought about your organic momentum versus this opportunity to do something obviously very strategic, very long-term, but with some financial implications and integration risk and all those other things. So kind of why now was the right time for this deal?
Okay. Yeah. Yes. We did have a good. We're having a good 2024. Again, as I mentioned earlier, Philippe and I have been talking for almost a year now. When you look at the portfolio of assets that Interpublic has, you look at the portfolio of assets that Omnicom has, you look at our geographic diversity, you look at where the talent is. Our companies complement each other quite a bit, first from a geographic point of view. It brings further strength in Latin America and Asia to us, probably in Europe to IPG. And overall, it increases our exposure to North America, especially the Americas, which in this environment, political environment, globally, I think all those are very positive things.
When you look at the investments that they've made in Acxiom and some of the other moves that they've made, similar in some ways to ours, but different, very much different in some ways to ours. The combination of all of our efforts from building platforms to Omni to Flywheel to all that data, and then the discipline that Acxiom has had and the client base and the long history and loyalty of its clients together, we'll be able to monetize that asset in many ways that over a broader client base than either company or an individual company would have difficulty in doing. We also bring together an incredible group of people throughout the world who are recognized annually, no matter what company they work for, of being the best and most talented people in the business.
All of that, once you get behind the curtain, makes an incredible amount of sense. And I'm sure I'm not doing justice to it in answering your question. The other thing that it does is, in the environment that we live in, with generative AI, with creating tools for dynamic content creation and all of that, which we're very advanced on and keeping pace with new discoveries that are being made in generative AI, every company in our business needs to make investments in order to stay at the cutting edge of that. So as we join forces, those platforms have to be enhanced, built, kept on the bleeding and cutting edge of where technology is going to take us for the benefit of our clients.
But if Interpublic was three-quarters our size, whereas yesterday I had a dollar to invest in those efforts, now I have a dollar sixty-seven to invest in those efforts. So it should make me more agile. It should make me take greater investment risks in testing new technologies and platforms as they come up, all for the benefit of providing better information, more accurate information. So our real knowledge workers, in whatever craft they lie in, are going to have the best tools to service those clients and get to the required KPIs that the client is looking to achieve. And Philippe, yeah.
I mean, I would definitely, a lot of what John was talking about, particularly towards the end, really, really resonates for me. So the complementarity of the offerings as we talked about where the fit is geographically, what a Flywheel plus Acxiom combination unlocks in terms of how much more we can solve for clients, how much more we can do for clients. But there's also other areas of the business that you've heard us both speak to that are higher growth areas of the business. Experiential, we're strong, and it happens that we also have very, very good fit geographically in terms of healthcare marketing. We both have outstanding capabilities. And again, there we think that together, there'll be even more that we can do for clients.
But ultimately, the comment there about everywhere we look at our industry technologies becoming involved to a greater degree in all of the areas that you hear us talk about as growth drivers in commerce, in media, in production. And so the ability to come together and make those investments and then have them ultimately pay out across a bigger footprint and just have the ability to, in essence, invest to innovate at a higher rate, given kind of direction of travel for the world at large, puts us in a stronger position. And that's a good place to be.
Our next question comes from the line of Julien Roch with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Yes. Good morning, everybody. Congratulations for becoming Le Grand Chien, as we say in French. Two questions on timing. The first one is, why so long in terms of closing second half of 2025? I would assume you can call a shell of the work pretty soon. And regulatory approval, I would expect only phase one. So if you could kind of explain why you think it's going to take so long, I would think you're thinking that some geography will go to phase two. So maybe a bit more fleshing out of the timing of the closing and, in the best case scenario, how early could it be? That's my first question. The second one is on the 750 of synergies.
You said achievable within 24 months, but if the closing is only the second half of 2025, looks like you're not going to get a lot of synergies in 2025. So can you tell us kind of how much of the 750 do you expect in 2025, 2026, and 2027? I mean, when do we get 100% of the 750? And then lastly, still on the 750 of synergies, that's 25% of the combined SG&A expenses, which is a lot. So can you flesh out the synergies between personnel and SG&A? Thank you very much.
I'm going to start with just a funny thing. One of our calls, you told me about how Americans can't have champagne. So Le Grand Chien is the big dog. I would say it's nice to become Le Grand Chien, which is the plural, because I think traveling in packs helps. And I think what we're talking about here, as we said earlier, is that the team that we can assemble, just the caliber of talent and the breadth of talent, and then the platforms part of the business, as John called out earlier, and then the ability to invest in innovation so that we can lead clients. So I think, again, we're definitely excited, but I'm going to go with a plural of what you called us.
Fair enough.
I'll try to technically answer, and then I'll open it up to Ellen or Phil to correct what I'm about to say if I do anything correctly. We're not in control of the regulatory process. What has to happen is, and it's probably quicker in a place like France than it is in the United States, we have to file a joint proxy, which probably will get done just in the beginning of the year, get it approved by the SEC. They can either review it, ask us questions, or they can just approve it. We're not in control of that situation. After that, I believe we can schedule the shareholder vote that you discussed, and it's in both of our interests to get this done as quickly as we possibly can.
Then what happens is you have probably an excess of probably 15, 16, 17 jurisdictions around the world, the most important ones obviously being the U.S. and the E.U., that have to approve the transaction. And we're hoping, and we have the best legal teams money can buy focused on this issue, and we'll go through that process. But we're not in control of that timeline. We are subject to the regulators and how quickly they're going to respond to this. The other thing that under U.S. law can't happen is, I mean, sitting here today, if we didn't have regulators, we could probably move very, very quickly towards getting the synergies in place. The way that the rules work is we can't take any of those actions. We can plan all we want, but we can't take any of those actions prior to receiving regulatory approval.
So we're going to move as quickly as we can. You can rest assured we certainly will know day one what we want the structure of the organization to be. I don't think we're harmed in many ways by being prevented from acting too quickly because it's just going to lead to further understanding by both Philippe and myself of some of the finer points that we'll be looking to achieve in the synergies. The synergies in this case compared to, and I've seen references in some analysts' early notes about synergies 10 years ago, $500 million with Publicis, that 500 million back then was going to be difficult to achieve. This time around is a lot simpler to achieve because the prior transaction had multiple exchanges around the world where our shares were going to be traded. In this case, you have two U.S. public companies.
You have a trend on back office. We're both probably a little slower than maybe some others, but have made a great deal of progress in terms of taking action already on our overheads and getting the value of our size. And we're both like-minded in the direction of travel that that's going. So the 750 synergies which are in the document, I'm extremely comfortable about us able to achieve those things simply through the elimination or choosing a single path, which is all that's required, so. And Phil.
Just a couple of thoughts, Julien, on timing and your questions. So from a timing perspective, that is one of the unknowns in terms of the transaction, as John said, so if we get through the regulatory process more quickly, we'll be prepared to start down a path of joining companies and becoming one more quickly, certainly. The first, I'll say, annual period, first 12 months, we do expect the transaction to be accretive to both sets of shareholders, no question, and the synergies are certainly part of that, but we're going to do a number of things. There are opportunities to streamline the organization, align our complementary businesses across our complementary disciplines, but there's a number of areas that we've identified together for opportunities to pursue when it comes to these synergies.
Some of them certainly relate to other things like duplicative spend with third-party vendors or real estate footprint for the consolidation. Given these two groups are coming together, there'll be opportunities there that we've thought quite a bit about already. Leveraging the technology platform and AI investments, as both John and Philippe have mentioned, is certainly both going to provide some opportunities to be more efficient together, as well as continue to invest in the technology that will continue to rapidly change at just a different level. Rather than having to make two independent decisions, two independent sets of investments, we'll have a much more efficient and effective position to make the investments we need to continue to make and be able to take advantage of the power of both of us coming together to be one.
So we expect to achieve some synergistic efficiencies from all those things. And we spent quite a bit of time preparing for that, but we're also going to spend more time, certainly between now and the closing, so that we hit the ground running.
Julien, I'll speak for myself. Philippe will then follow. In the last year as we've been having these conversations, I don't think the question has ever really come up in any of our conversations of any importance because we know that we can achieve those. What attracted me to this transaction are the capabilities of how we can improve the services to our clients to service their needs and to grow our revenue. So I'm approaching this morning looking at the revenue possibilities. We both, day one, have skills and capabilities which could improve the portfolio with our existing client base.
And with the rapid pace of changes going on, the investments we're already making, by the time we get through this period and we get the synergies as we've laid them out, which I think is conservative, we'll be onto yet new unspoken of this morning ways to service clients and servicing whatever their requirements are. I don't know if.
The impetus on our side was always strategic. So the conversations John and I started having, which were about a year ago to this point, the idea was, where's the industry moving to? How can we drive growth? How can we bring clients a portfolio that is the most comprehensive, whether you're thinking about that from a capability point of view or from a delivery geography point of view? And obviously, when you're going to take these two very sizable organizations and then start thinking about some of what Phil was talking about, there clearly will be a meaningful benefit. But it was never a driver of what led the conversations to move forward or what really, as you hear from us this morning, excites us about this.
Okay. Very clear. Thank you very much.
Okay. Ciao.
Our next question comes from the line of Cameron McVeigh with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks. Just to follow up on a previous question, when you think about incremental revenue growth opportunities, where are you most excited and where do you expect to see the largest impact going forward? Thanks.
I can tell you where the most immediate impact will come from, and it's significant. But I think things that are in beta right now are going to affect us and create growth in the future. But you've heard Philippe talk about the things that they're working on, like principal media buying. That's something that, from a very transparent and ethical point of view, we've perfected, we've tested. Those are all capabilities, skills, processes, and everything else that we can absolutely lend to IPG's client base that they haven't been able, or they're in the process of doing more and more with, but not to the extent of the others in the competitive set. On the other side of the equation, you've seen people write notes questioning not our technical capabilities or abilities to do anything without owning first-party data and all the implications of that.
People from afar have been impressed with the performance of Publicis and what they've been able to do with Epsilon. We certainly will be able to do that and more by the combination of IPG's assets with our assets. That takes that question, if it ever was one, off the table as we bring this together. Then as I go through the organization, which I won't bore you with, there's an awful lot of other capabilities which are never pronounced in these calls, but we'll be able to leverage. We have great representation in being able to service Adobe clients and all the rest of it in our CRM practice. We have a hole at Omnicom on the Salesforce side. They have that. I mean, I could get into minutiae here, but we probably don't have time before the market opens.
So when you get into the guts of what's in each other's portfolios, it is quite extraordinary. It is quite extraordinary. And we didn't focus on it in our comps this morning, but when you look at the depth and breadth that both organizations bring, not to healthcare advertising, but to the practice of marketing of healthcare, there is no one that can even come close to servicing every aspect of what a pharmaceutical or an ethical pharmaceutical company wants to do than the combination of the assets that we have plus the assets that they have. And they very much complement each other. So if I was a pharmaceutical company, especially, I'd pause and look at what the combined portfolio of this company will have in six or nine months whenever we're approved from a regulatory point of view.
So you'll see in the fullness of time the extraordinary depth of both companies.
Yeah. I mean, I would touch on all the same. I think that the offering on the healthcare side that we can put together is going to be extremely compelling. Which is not to say that our current independent offerings are not very, very strong. I think that you've heard us talk about the degree to which proprietary trading principal buying has been an area which, in relatively recent, say, 18 months' time, has become very important to clients. And so this meaningfully accelerates and elevates our ability to deliver that so we can take the terrific media product and now, with a partner, move along that track with much more certainty, knowing that it's with a partner that does it very, very well.
To John's point, in that area where you're now being looked on by clients to deliver sort of a holistic solution that has both a tech component and a data component and a media component, what we believe we can put together is going to be very, very, it's going to be exceptional. And then I guess last for us, Flywheel, when you think about cross-sell, and all of the ways and all the places in which, in our world, that capability and that data set will be very, very useful when combined with what we already do in media or in precision. So all of those are areas of meaningful opportunity, we think.
Go ahead. Thank you.
Our final question comes from the line of Adrien de Saint Hilaire with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Yep. Thank you very much. I just had a couple of questions, please. Will the IPG agencies be folded into the Omnicom structure? So, for example, will McCann be part of Omnicom Advertising Group and UM be part of Omnicom Media Group, or will they operate standalone? And then you both have been saying that you've been in conversation for a year. Perhaps I was curious, what was the trigger for the start of the conversation? And perhaps what was the trigger to actually conclude a deal? Was it maybe recent elections or changes in the industry? Just interested in your color there. Thank you.
Sure. So there have been no media decisions made whatsoever in terms of how the portfolio assets of both companies are going to function post-regulatory approval. And what we will do is, in the intervening period, we'll have conversations about what's best first for clients and our people in terms of the way that we'll approach this. And we'll make appropriate decisions based upon what's going to lead to greater growth and greater career opportunities for our best and talented people. And how are we going to track the next level or generation of people? So the structure I wouldn't get too hung up about. And any employee listening to this, if you're associated with any revenue stream at all, you're gold. Don't worry about it. We will accommodate and fix whatever it is we have to fix.
So that's not a pressing issue, nor should we be concerned about anyone. I don't know.
No. I think, look, as John says, I mean, this is not a collapsing brand. It is not a winning long-term strategy here, right? And so the compelling logic for us was strategic throughout. And the conversations, as they took place, sort of unpacked all the things we've shared with you this morning about how good a fit we have found and how much we see that can come together where the benefits accrue to clients, the kinds of solutions we can take to them, how we can help them grow. And then, as he said, there's clearly opportunity in there for all of our colleagues.
Thank you both.
Great.