When a consulting giant with $18 billion in annual revenue acquires the creator economy’s most prominent independent agency, brand marketers should not be celebrating. They should be reading their contracts. The Accenture Song acquisition of Whalar is the largest agency consolidation deal the creator economy has seen, and it changes the risk calculus for every brand running influencer programs at scale.
Why This Deal Is Bigger Than a Headline
Whalar built its reputation on creator relationships, proprietary matching technology, and a network spanning tens of thousands of creators globally. Accenture Song brings enterprise infrastructure, consulting scale, and — critically — a data architecture that runs across clients in ways most marketers never fully audit.
The combination creates something new: a full-stack creator intelligence operation embedded inside a systems integrator. That means the same firm that might run your CRM, your media buying, and your brand strategy could now also own the pipes through which your creator campaign data flows.
When your influencer agency is also your technology consultant, the lines between vendor and infrastructure blur — and that ambiguity almost always favors the agency at contract renewal time.
For brands evaluating their agency AOR options, this is the moment to pressure-test assumptions about independence and data custody.
The Data Ownership Problem Nobody Is Talking About
Here is the practical question: when Whalar runs a campaign for your brand, who owns the performance data generated by that campaign?
In most legacy influencer agency contracts, the answer is ambiguous at best. Engagement rates, conversion lift data, creator-level CPMs, audience overlap analytics — these get generated inside proprietary platforms and are typically licensed back to the brand rather than owned outright. The agency retains the underlying dataset. At scale, that data becomes a competitive asset for the agency’s other clients.
Post-acquisition, Accenture Song gains the ability to aggregate Whalar’s creator performance data across an enterprise client portfolio. That aggregate benchmark data has enormous value. It informs pitch decks, pricing models, and competitive insights. Brands contributing data to that pool should understand what they are giving up.
The FTC has published guidance on data brokering relationships and disclosure obligations at ftc.gov that is worth revisiting through this lens, particularly for brands in regulated categories like finance, healthcare, and CPG.
Practically, brands need to add three clauses to every creator platform and agency agreement going forward: explicit data ownership language, a prohibition on anonymized aggregation without consent, and a data return or deletion obligation on contract termination. The contract infrastructure questions that once seemed like legal boilerplate are now operational necessities.
Attribution Independence: The Quiet Casualty of Consolidation
Attribution is where consolidation deals do their most invisible damage.
When the agency that runs your creator program also owns or integrates with the measurement tool, you have a conflict. Whalar had built proprietary measurement capabilities. Accenture Song has existing relationships with enterprise analytics vendors and runs its own data practice. The convergence creates a scenario where the entity measuring campaign effectiveness is commercially motivated to report favorably.
This is not a hypothetical concern. The eMarketer research community has documented measurement discrepancies between agency-reported influencer campaign results and independently verified outcomes for years. The gap typically runs 15-30% on engagement metrics and can be wider on conversion claims.
Brands running programs at meaningful scale (above $2 million annually in creator spend) should be demanding independent third-party measurement as a contractual requirement, not a nice-to-have. Tools like Nielsen One, Lucid, or Innovid can provide baseline attribution verification that sits outside the agency’s reporting stack. If your current contract allows the agency to self-report without third-party corroboration, that clause needs to be renegotiated now, not at renewal.
The attribution conversation connects directly to how your finance team evaluates creator programs. If you are building the business case internally, read up on creator ROI frameworks that finance teams actually approve — especially as consolidated agencies may push metrics that flatter their own reporting.
Vendor Portability: What Happens When You Want to Leave
This is the section most brands skip until it is too late.
Vendor portability in creator platform contracts refers to your ability to migrate your creator roster data, campaign history, audience insights, and performance benchmarks to a new partner without paying extraction penalties or losing institutional knowledge. Most brands discover they have almost none of it.
Creator roster data is particularly vulnerable. If Whalar has been managing your creator relationships — handling outreach, negotiation, contract execution, and performance tracking inside their platform — that relationship history lives in their system, not yours. Post-acquisition, that data is now part of Accenture Song’s enterprise infrastructure. Extracting it becomes a negotiation, not a right.
The parallel to what happened with programmatic media buying is instructive. Brands that allowed agencies to control their DSP seat access and audience data found themselves effectively locked in. Switching costs were so high that budget decisions got made based on vendor convenience rather than performance. Creator programs are heading toward the same dynamic at scale, with roster lock-in replacing DSP lock-in.
According to Statista, the global influencer marketing industry is projected to exceed $35 billion by the end of the decade. At that scale, roster data portability becomes a strategic asset, not just a contractual detail.
Your creator roster is a proprietary brand asset. If your agency agreement doesn’t explicitly grant you ownership and portability rights over that data, you don’t actually own your program.
What Smart Brands Are Doing Right Now
The Accenture Song / Whalar deal is a forcing function. Brands that respond tactically will update a contract clause. Brands that respond strategically will redesign their creator program infrastructure.
The strategic response has four components.
- Audit your current agreements. Pull every creator platform contract and agency agreement. Flag any clause that grants the vendor rights to aggregate, anonymize, or commercially use your campaign data.
- Demand data portability SLAs. Require that all campaign data — creator-level performance, audience data, historical benchmarks — be exportable in standard formats (CSV, API) within 30 days of contract termination.
- Separate measurement from execution. If your agency is running campaigns and measuring them, break that dependency. Independent measurement is non-negotiable for programs above a certain spend threshold.
- Build internal roster intelligence. Maintain your own CRM-style record of creator relationships. Do not allow that institutional knowledge to live exclusively inside a vendor platform. Tools like Notion, Airtable, or purpose-built creator CRM software can provide a brand-owned layer.
For teams also thinking about how to run creator programs more efficiently as the agency landscape consolidates, the comparison between AI-assisted and manual creator programs is increasingly relevant. Automation can provide some insulation from agency dependency if the tech stack is brand-owned rather than vendor-owned.
It is also worth revisiting your roster strategy and platform decisions holistically. Consolidation at the agency level is a signal to diversify your creator supply chain, not concentrate it further with a newly enlarged partner.
Brands managing global creator programs should also be aware that data ownership questions vary significantly by jurisdiction. The ICO in the UK has published guidance on data processor relationships that applies directly to agency-held campaign data at ico.org.uk. GDPR and its equivalents create additional leverage for European brands negotiating data return clauses.
Finally, the consolidation happening at the agency layer is mirrored by AI-driven efficiency plays inside agencies themselves. Understanding how agency AI cuts affect your in-house team is part of the same strategic conversation — when agencies automate, the knowledge that was once distributed across account teams gets concentrated in proprietary systems that brands cannot access.
The Accenture Song / Whalar deal will not be the last consolidation of this kind. Treat it as the first. Every contract you sign from this point forward should be written as if the vendor might be acquired by a global consulting firm within 18 months. Because now, that scenario has a real-world precedent.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the Accenture Song acquisition of Whalar mean for brands currently using Whalar?
Brands currently using Whalar should immediately review their existing contracts for data ownership clauses, attribution methodology, and termination rights. The acquisition means your campaign data and creator roster intelligence now sits within Accenture Song’s broader enterprise infrastructure. Contracts that were acceptable with an independent agency may carry different risk profiles under a consulting firm with cross-client data practices.
Who owns influencer campaign data when an agency manages it on your behalf?
In most standard agency contracts, the brand licenses access to campaign performance data rather than owning it outright. The agency typically retains the underlying dataset within their platform. Brands should negotiate explicit data ownership language, prohibitions on cross-client aggregation, and data return obligations at contract termination to protect their interests.
What is vendor portability in creator platform contracts and why does it matter?
Vendor portability refers to your contractual right to export and migrate your creator roster data, campaign history, and audience insights when switching agencies or platforms. Without explicit portability clauses, brands can face high switching costs that effectively lock them into a vendor relationship regardless of performance. This risk is amplified when the vendor is acquired and integrated into a larger enterprise system.
How should brands protect attribution independence when working with consolidated agency groups?
Brands should require independent third-party measurement as a contractual term, separating campaign execution from campaign measurement. Tools like Nielsen One, Lucid, or Innovid provide verification outside the agency’s reporting stack. For programs above roughly $2 million in annual creator spend, self-reported metrics from the executing agency should not be the sole source of performance truth.
Is the Whalar acquisition an isolated event or part of a broader creator economy consolidation trend?
This acquisition is part of an accelerating consolidation trend. Holding companies and management consultancies are acquiring creator-economy specialists to build full-stack marketing services that combine strategy, technology, and execution. Brands should expect further consolidation and design their creator program contracts with portability, data independence, and measurement autonomy as baseline requirements rather than negotiated extras.
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Moburst
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