Omnicom vs IPG: Benefits Cuts & Christmas Week Clash

by Archynetys Economy Desk

“You could work it out with your partner, and be there for your kids as best as you both can,” the business manager said.

Documents obtained by ADWEEK show Omnicom offers 10 total weeks of paid parental leave, which must be taken as a continuous block and used within 20 weeks of birth, adoption, or foster placement. The policy also requires employees to exhaust all state or disability benefits before Omnicom pays anything.

“We’re going from a flexible, maximum six months to a rigid, not flexible, 10 weeks,” said the business manager. The media employee added the new policy is “so absolutely cruel to the workers and their children.”

Healthcare costs rise for “lower quality” coverage

Workers described IPG’s healthcare plans as comparatively affordable, with multiple options — including inexpensive HMOs — and single combined deductibles that made costs easier to manage. Several employees said they previously paid into UnitedHealthcare or Cigna plans that felt “straightforward” and less confusing than what they are now being offered.

According to Omnicom’s 2026 benefits materials, employees will have access to four Aetna medical plans: an EPO option, a Premier PPO with a lower deductible, a Health Savings Plan and a high-deductible HSA-eligible plan. Workers told ADWEEK the lineup is more limited and more expensive, with some plans carrying higher premiums and separate deductibles for medical and prescription drugs. Employees may also opt into a more expensive plan with broader out-of-network coverage.

“It’s generally more expensive for lower quality care,” said the health creative. “If you do want the premier package, it’s notably more expensive.”

Return to office–or forfeit your severance

IPG did not enforce a return-to-office mandate before the acquisition, according to employees; many teams operated fully remote or hybrid.

Several workers said Omnicom’s policy, which requires employees to be in-office three days per week with a stated intent to move to five, represents an abrupt cultural change. Managers have been instructed to begin bringing in teams immediately.

The policy also allows Omnicom to deny raises and promotions to employees who do not comply, and explicitly states that workers terminated for violating the policy are not eligible for severance.

The business manager described it as “jarring,” while health creative added that Omnicom “is obsessed with RTO [return to office].”

Omnicom’s severance policy in general is also less favorable than IPG’s, providing roughly one week of pay per year of service, capped at 12 weeks for employees with five or more years of tenure.

IPG’s domestic employee termination policy, reviewed by ADWEEK, guaranteed employees two weeks’ pay after three months of service, three weeks at two years, and an additional week of salary for each year through their 14th anniversary. Workers there for more than 14 years earned two extra weeks per year — a structure that could easily exceed 20 or 30 weeks of pay.

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