The Relax Room at Omnicom Media Group, Madrid, Spain,
The Relaxation Room thus presents itself as a space for calm, introspection, and connection.
Designed by Ramos Alderete Studio,
Photograph by Alberto Amores
seen from Russia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Yemen
seen from Canada
seen from China
seen from Netherlands
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from France
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Netherlands
The Relax Room at Omnicom Media Group, Madrid, Spain,
The Relaxation Room thus presents itself as a space for calm, introspection, and connection.
Designed by Ramos Alderete Studio,
Photograph by Alberto Amores
Nomination – omnicom
CONGRATULATIONS @omnicom Your fanart here has been nominated by one of your fans for the 2020 3rd Quarterly Inuyasha Fandom Awards, run by FeudalConnection!
Your work has been nominated in the following category:
Best Romance
Voting will take place between July 29th and August 12th, and the links to do so can be found on the feudalconnection Tumblr page.
If you would like to pull your work from consideration for an award, please let us know via the Tumblr page or [email protected].
Once again, congratulations for your beautiful contributions to this wonderful fandom, and thank you for all that you do!
NOMINATIONS ARE OPEN UNTIL THE END OF THE DAY JULY15TH, SUBMIT YOUR FIC/ARTWORK NOMINATIONS THROUGH OUR PAGE
#Omnicom ♑
#Media 💡
#India 🍘
#Secures 👀
#SBI🪩
#Massive 🌸
#₹250+Crore 🍀
#DigitalMarketing 🎴
#Mandate🫧
Omnicom Media India Secures SBI’s Massive ₹250+ Crore Digital Marketing Mandate
https://amoghavarshaonline.blogspot.com/2026/06/omnicom-media-india-secures-sbis.html
All In All Niche This Website Is About All Niches And We Are Dealing With Utmost Proficiency Treating All Niches In General Author : Amogha
Discover how Omnicom's Credera accelerates global growth through strategic integration with LeapPoint. Learn key insights and success stories in this case study.
Omnicom: 14% Reward Elevate Signals An Intense Expectation (NYSE: OMC)
This post was created by Adhere To I am Gen Alpha. I have greater than 14 years of financial investment experience, and an MBA in Money. I concentrate on supplies that are extra protective in nature, with a tool- to long-lasting perspective. I supply high-yield, reward development financial investment concepts in the spending team iREIT ®+ HOYA Funding. The team assists capitalists attain…
Requiem for a dream.
At times I think like the author Ray Bradbury, who said, “Writing is like a muscle: the more you write, the stronger it becomes.” Other times I think like the novelist Rachel Billington, who said, “Writing is like riding a bike; you never forget how.” So which is it? Something you work at? Something ingrained? Both? Neither?
As I sit down to mark the 15th anniversary of the day I began this blog, no wonder I’m conflicted. Having suspended blog writing three weeks ago, I at first thought I had suffered an acute loss of writing muscle mass, no longer feeling obligated to find subjects suitable for you to read and me to opine. My excuse: I have a book to complete on deadline, but if you can’t find time for a 500-word post, how are you going to bring a 50,000-word work to fruition?
On Saturday there was a New York Times story that got me back on the bike and planted at the keyboard.
In a piece called, “Netflix’s Swallowing of Warner Bros. Will Be the End of Hollywood,” the reporter observes, “The danger here is not annihilation but centralization,” concluding with:
“Hollywood has survived many predicted deaths. But it has never tested what happens when the number of major creative buyers collapses toward one dominant center of gravity. A merger between Netflix and Warner Bros. wouldn’t destroy Hollywood, but it would flatten its creative diversity, weaken its theatrical channel and bring a huge cultural category under the near-total control of a single company.”
Remind you of anything going on in our business?
The merger of Omnicom and IPG won’t destroy advertising , but it surely will flatten its creative diversity, destroy jobs, and end careers. There are many casualties as a result – employees of all types, tenures, and expertise; suppliers of every stripe; freelancers and gig workers -- but the victims who will suffer the most are the clients, at first not realizing or recognizing the damage, much if it irreparable, they’ve sustained.
What gives me hope are the conversations I’ve had with more than a dozen advertising people as I go about preparing the fourth edition of The Art of Client Service, nearly all of whom do not work for Omnicom/IPG or any of the other overgrown, under-powered, held-hostage-by-Wall Street holding companies.
Hollywood survived the advent of television, home video, the internet, streaming, and now artificial intelligence. It will continue, perhaps not in a form any of us can imagine, but surely will prevail.
Advertising also will survive, perhaps not in a form any of us can imagine, but if I were to place a bet, I would place it on many of the people with whom I spoke, and thousands of unknown, unnamed others who will carry on. In the storm of adversity drowning the holding companies are the very things that will rescue these give-it-a-shot pioneers.
Today I returned to the first post I wrote 15 years ago to launch Adventures in Client Service, where I wrote:
“Working with clients is indeed an adventure, one with no clear outcome. You arrive at work every day wondering if you will have a client blow-up or meltdown on your hands, or if you will need to solve a problem seemingly without resolution, or if you will get to go home at a reasonable hour, “reasonable” being any time before 9:00 pm.”
That part remains (mostly) true. In the unlikely event I continue Adventures for the next 15 years – at that point I will be approaching 90, meaning either I’ve lost it, or am dead – I suspect I would make much the same point, knowing the face of agencies might change but the people committed to the work won’t. When I began this blog I never imagined it would last as long as it has.
Adventures has endured for the very reasons why advertising never dies: it is about ideas. Dismissible ideas, disposable ideas, and on occasion, engaging, enduring ideas.
You can kill Omnicom and IPG by merging their agencies into anonymous oblivion, but the one thing you cannot kill is an idea.
Advertising is here to stay. For those of you who have been with me as I’ve made this journey, I am glad for your company, and with gratitude thank you for it.
Postscript: I’ve often explained that my definition of “minor surgery” is surgery happening to someone else. Tomorrow I will be undergoing that very thing – Doctors prefer to call it a “procedure” – to replace my right hip. If all goes as planned, I will see you on the other side.
Trump’s FTC agrees to Omnicom merger — with a present to X
The all-Republican Federal Commerce Fee agreed to approve a $13.5 billion advert merger if it features a ban on steering advert {dollars} away from platforms or publishers based mostly on “political or ideological viewpoints.” The order, which was reported by The New York Occasions earlier this month, would forestall advert big Omnicom from wholesale avoiding platforms like X based mostly on…
Omnicom Media Group Expands Reach with Glovo Partnership
https://tinyurl.com/ycyww3ht
Omnicom Media Group (OMG), a prominent media services division within Omnicom Group, has entered into a strategic collaboration with Glovo