Diana Bradley
Sep 7, 2024

Report: X brings on Targeted Victory for comms support

X taps Republican consulting firm Targeted Victory, owned by Stagwell Group, to manage the fallout from its suspension in Brazil, according to Wired.

Photo: Getty Images
Photo: Getty Images

X is working with Targeted Victory, a Republican-leaning digital marketing firm, according to a report from Wired

Targeted Victory is handling messaging about X’s ban in Brazil, Wired reported. The country disallowed the platform after X violated a court order from Brazil’s Superior Electoral Court requiring the company to remove certain accounts and content that the court said spread disinformation about the integrity of the country’s elections.

 A spokesperson for Targeted Victory was not available for comment.

When PRWeek reached out to X for comment via email, the automated reply said, “Busy now, please check back later.”

Targeted Victory is owned by Stagwell Group. In Q2, the holding company reported revenue growth of 6% year-over-year to $671 million. Organic net revenue growth declined significantly in Q2, however, increasing 1.2% versus 8% in the prior quarter

In June, X expanded the role of global government affairs head Nick Pickles to include directing global communications, the Financial Times reported. Pickles posted on X on Thursday that he is leaving the company.

Before him, Joe Benarroch handled comms for X. He left in June, according to the FT. Benarroch, X’s former head of business operations, joined the company last June and acted as an X spokesperson.

Yaccarino has been facing pressure from X owner Elon Musk to boost sales and cut costs, according to the Financial Times.

Musk decimated the comms team at X, formerly known as Twitter, shortly after buying the social network for $44 billion in October 2022.

Before Benarroch joined X, one of the company’s last comms staffers after Musk eliminated nearly all of the department was Rebecca Hahn. She left her role as the social media network’s VP of global communications in January 2023 to join Tools for Humanity as chief communications officer.

In March 2023, [email protected] was set up to respond to queries with an automated reply that included nothing but a poop emoji. Now, when [email protected] is emailed for comment, it replies with, “Busy now, please check back later.”

In June, at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, WPP chief executive Mark Read asked Musk about comments he made last November when he told advertisers to “go f*ck yourselves.” Musk stood by his comments, insisting he will “choose free speech rather than agreeing to be censored for money.”

A report published this week from U.K. market research firm Kantar found that 26% of marketers are planning to reduce their ad spend on X in 2025.

Source:
PRWeek

Related Articles

Just Published

2 hours ago

Generation Greytt: The trillion-dollar market that ...

Armed with unprecedented pocket power and digital savvy, the over-50s are redefining what it means to age. Yet businesses remain fixated on youth, overlooking a demographic that's more adventurous, connected and ready to spend than ever before. Rajeev Lochan opines.

3 hours ago

TBWA dominates in Japan/Korea AOY 2024 awards

Accenture Song and TBWA walked home with multiple metals at the 2024 Campaign Asia-Pacific Agency of the Year awards for Japan and Korea. Check out the highlights here.

4 hours ago

Hong Kong's unique spirit: A 'Never Normal' love ...

Forget dim sums and skyscrapers, over 40 brands and influencers from Hong Kong join forces to embrace the city's chaotic charm, eclectic character, and resilient spirit in an unconventional campaign.

4 hours ago

Global ad spend to hit $1.08 trillion in 2024 as ...

WARC's latest study also reveals tech giants' intensifying dominance of global ad spend and social media leading unprecedented growth—but regulatory headwinds still threaten to reshape this burgeoning landscape.