Goodby, Silverstein & Partners Closes Its New York Office
Goodby, Silverstein & Partners has closed its New York office after
just over two and a half years in operation, agency founder Jeff Goodby
told Adweek today.
Earlier this year, Goodby sent out a memo to employees
about how client Comcast's failed merger with Time Warner would require
layoffs for GS&P. However, at the time, he seemed optimistic about
the New York office's future:
"Our New York office, which will now be smaller, is an amazing beacon
of freshness and light. Their wins of the New York Post and StreetEasy,
and the Emily's Oz project for Comcast are all widely celebrated pieces of work," Goodby wrote in the May memo. "We're sure the office will leap forward."
The union of the two communications powerhouses would have created
America's largest Internet/entertainment company, but it fell through
after Washington regulators made clear that they would fight to block
it.
Goodby explained the situation in the internal memo, writing that
"Comcast wanted [advertising] work to explain this merger" but had to
cancel planned campaigns. Today, Goodby told Adweek that his agency had
hoped to grow the Comcast account into something much bigger, but
prospects for the New York office dimmed after the proposed merger fell
through.
"When that didn't happen, a lot of the funding for the office didn't make sense," Goodby said.
Goodby told Adweek the office employed close to 20 people at its height
of operations and that eight people were working there when it closed
this month. All are no longer GS&P employees, though Goodby said he
would not be surprised "if we worked with many of them unofficially in
the future, or even officially at some point."
The office won three new accounts that it ran independently: ZocDoc,
the New York Post and real-estate listings company StreetEasy. These
accounts technically remain with GS&P for now, but all three will
most likely seek New York-based agencies to handle their accounts
following Goodby's announcement.
"The office did really good work that we're really proud of," Goodby
said. "Ironically, some of the best stuff was for Comcast, including the
'Emily's Oz' spot."
That campaign, which launched in February, won a bronze Lion in the
Titanium and Integrated category at Cannes. It was also shortlisted in
the Film Lions category (for Commercial Public Services, Production
Design/Art Direction, Script and Direction).
GS&P New York executive creative director Paul Caiozzo and managing
partner Nancy Reyes said in a statement: "We feel honored to have
gotten the chance to spend the last year surrounded by some of the most
spectacular coworkers and clients. We set out on a simple mission to
make better advertising. Thanks to our clients' bravery, intelligence
and partnership we were able to do that. A tremendous thank you to
Comcast, The New York Post, StreetEasy and ZocDoc."
Goodby speculated that Caiozzo might continue to work on some of those
clients on a freelance basis. Asked about that, Caiozzo said, "I would
be humbled at the opportunity to continue working with any one of our
clients. I would defer to them for any comments about the future of our
working relationships."
Last month, multiple sources told AgencySpy
that the New York office would be closing after the 2015 Cannes Lions,
but both Goodby and Caiozzo contradicted that claim. At the time, Goodby
said that he'd caught wind of related rumors but that his agency had no
plans to shutter its New York operations, while Caiozzo told AgencySpy
that the Manhattan-based team would "now be smaller" but would continue
to work with clients.
With today's closure announcement, though, GS&P says it will retain its status as Comcast's creative agency of record.
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