About MarComms Hub
An independent reference for the integrated marketing communications industry.
What this is
MarComms Hub is a structured directory of integrated marketing communications agencies and a small library of reference material around them. It exists because the IMC discipline is genuinely interesting — the craft of orchestrating advertising, public relations, direct marketing, sales promotion, digital, social, and experiential work around a single brand strategy — and because the public information about the agencies practising it is scattered across press releases, holding-company sites, awards databases, and industry trade press.
The site collects that information into one consistent shape: a profile per agency, with country, founding year, specializations, and a written overview, plus cross-cutting indexes by country, specialization, and founding decade. It is meant to be browseable rather than searchable, and read rather than queried. Every page is a real page with substantive content; nothing here is a placeholder.
What this is not
MarComms Hub is not a marketplace, not a leads service, not a ranking, and not a pay-for-placement directory. Inclusion is editorial. The site does not solicit submissions from agencies, does not accept payment for inclusion or for higher placement, and does not collect contact information from agency profiles to resell. If you spot an inaccuracy in a profile, the best thing to do is to consult the source listed on the methodology page — that's where the directory's data comes from.
It is also not a substitute for a current conversation with an agency. Agency capabilities, leadership, rosters, and positioning shift continuously. The data here is refreshed periodically against public reference sources, but the agency itself remains the most authoritative source on what its team is working on right now.
Who this is for
The audience is anyone who needs a reasonably structured map of the IMC industry: marketers scoping a pitch list, students studying the discipline, journalists profiling the sector, agency staff orienting themselves to peers and competitors, and curious readers who simply want to see how the industry is shaped. The site is deliberately calm and reference-oriented rather than promotional.
Editorial stance
Profiles are descriptive rather than evaluative. We don't rank. We don't review. We don't pick favourites. Where the underlying data is uncertain — a contested founding date, an ambiguous home market, a specialization label that doesn't quite fit — the profile says so plainly rather than papering over the gap. The methodology page describes the sources used and the choices made when those sources disagree.
Contact and corrections
This is a static reference, not a live customer-service operation. Corrections to public-record information should be raised with the underlying source so the change propagates broadly; the directory is rebuilt from those sources on a recurring schedule. For background on how to read a profile, see the methodology page; for definitions of the vocabulary used here, see the glossary.