
Hex brings together around 50 creative technologists from disciplines including architecture, gaming, fine art and robotics, and will focus on generative and agentic AI, gaming, immersive experiences and robotics for clients across WPP’s global network.
The studio’s workforce is drawn from WPP’s Creative Tech Apprenticeship programme, a nine-month paid initiative launched in 2022 to recruit and train talent from outside traditional advertising and engineering pathways.
WPP aims to train at least 1,000 people through the programme by 2030. The curriculum focuses on creative problem-solving and adapting to emerging technologies, with participants working on real-world client projects.
The unit, which sits within WPP Production, will function as a creative production studio, research and development lab, and consultancy. The team will work directly with clients to explore emerging technologies, develop applications and build internal AI capabilities.
The studio has already contributed to a range of projects. These include an activation for Unilever’s Dirt Is Good at SXSW 2025 that combined AI coaching with motion capture technology, the creation of AI-generated campaign assets and television advertising, and the development of a hardware prototype to reimagine Britain’s national rail clock.
The launch comes as businesses continue to face challenges in adopting AI technologies at scale. WPP positions Hex as a response to the growing demand for talent capable of applying AI tools in practical business environments.
Rather than focusing solely on technology development, the studio emphasises training, experimentation and implementation. Teams from Hex will be embedded with clients for extended periods to identify business challenges, develop solutions and train employees to work independently with AI-powered workflows.
WPP Production chief executive Richard Glasson said: “Creative technology sits at the intersection of imagination and craft. WPP Production has supported this extraordinary programme from the very beginning because we believe deeply in constantly finding new ways to make the best work. That commitment is rooted in one of our core values: nurturing the next generation of talent and giving them unparalleled opportunities to create culture-shifting work through emerging technologies and the power of their own creativity.”
Hex will collaborate with technology companies including Adobe, Google and Nvidia to test emerging technologies and evaluate their commercial applications.
WPP chief innovation officer Elav Horwitz, who is also executive sponsor of Hex, added: “The era of AI demands a fundamental shift in our creative mindset and how we approach problem-solving. This isn’t just about closing a skills gap; it’s about building the workforce for the new economy.
“By training the next generation of talent and embedding these forward-deployed experts with our clients, we’re reshaping how we think, create and deliver truly innovative solutions for brands.”
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