Corporate marketing teams face a new regulatory reality. The era of handshake deals with creative agencies is over, replaced by strict compliance needs under the Consumer Protection Act 2019 and the Digital Personal Data Protection Act.
An advertising agreement now functions as a primary risk management tool, defining ownership of intellectual property and liability for misleading claims.
This guide breaks down the essential legal structures, from financial audits to exit management, required to secure brand assets in the Indian market.
The Modern Advertising Agreement.
Contracts between companies and agencies in India changed. They are no longer simple service orders. They are risk management tools for data privacy, consumer protection, and intellectual property.
The relationship between a corporate entity and an advertising agency shifted significantly over the last decade. Historically, companies viewed agencies as simple vendors for buying media space. Today, the landscape involves complex intellectual property creation, strict regulatory compliance under the Consumer Protection Act 2019, and data privacy governance via the DPDP Act 2023.
An advertising agreement serves as a governance instrument. It manages the liabilities of misleading ads, ownership of brand assets, and transparency in media buying. The old “handshake” culture is gone. It is replaced by Master Services Agreements (MSAs) that anticipate conflict and define legal safety.
1. Agent vs. Independent Contractor
A primary decision is the legal classification of the relationship. This choice dictates liability and taxation. Most modern agreements use a hybrid model.
2. Defining Scope & Governance
A static list of services often fails. Marketing strategies change rapidly. Best practices use a two-tiered structure.
The MSA
The Master Services Agreement holds static legal terms like Indemnity, Confidentiality, and Termination. It stays effective for 3-5 years.
The SOW
Statements of Work are annexed documents. They detail specific campaigns, deliverables, and fees. They allow agility without renegotiating the main contract.
3. Commercial Models & Fees
Financial structures determine incentive alignment. While the traditional 15% commission is fading, three distinct models dominate the Indian market.
Retainer Model
Best for Strategy & Creative
A fixed monthly fee covers overheads and profit. Provides stability but may discourage agility.
Commission Model
Best for Media Buying
Agency takes a % of media spend. Incentivizes spending more, which can conflict with efficiency goals.
Hybrid / Performance
Best for Digital/E-com
Base fee covers costs. Bonus is unlocked by hitting KPIs (ROAS, Lead Quality, Brand Lift).
4. The Digital Layer: Influencers & Programmatic
Modern agreements must address the nuances of digital delivery. The rise of influencer marketing and programmatic buying introduces specific risks that older contract formats miss.
Influencer Protocols (ASCI)
- Disclosure Liability: The Agreement must mandate that all influencers hired by the Agency use clear labels (e.g., #Ad, #Sponsored) as per ASCI guidelines.
- Vetting Clause: The Agency must warrant that they have vetted influencers for prior controversial behavior that could damage brand reputation.
- Content Take-down: A clause allowing the Client to demand immediate removal of influencer content without cause.
Programmatic & Ad Fraud
- Viewability Standards: Define what counts as a “viewable impression” (e.g., IAB standards). Clients should not pay for ads loaded below the fold.
- Make-Good Rights: If Ad Fraud (bot traffic) is detected, the Agency must provide “make-good” inventory or credits.
- Brand Safety: Explicit exclusion lists to prevent ads from appearing on hate speech or adult sites.
5. The Intellectual Property Trap
Paying an invoice does not automatically transfer copyright ownership in India. Under Section 17 of the Copyright Act 1957, the Agency remains the first owner unless an assignment exists.
The 5-Year Rule
If an assignment agreement does not specify a duration, Section 19(5) deems it to be five years. Rights revert to the Agency after this period. You must explicitly state “Perpetual”.
Visualizing IP Transfer Risks
The diagram below illustrates the correct legal flow to secure assets.
6. The Indemnity Matrix
A common friction point is determining who pays when things go wrong. A well-drafted “Mutual Indemnity” clause separates responsibilities clearly.
| Scenario | Responsible Party | Standard Liability Cap |
|---|---|---|
| IP Infringement Agency uses stolen images/music. |
Agency | Uncapped / Unlimited |
| Product Claims Ad makes a claim based on Client data that proves false. |
Client | Uncapped / Unlimited |
| Performance Failure Agency fails to meet ROI targets. |
Agency | Fees Paid (12 Months) |
| Payment to Vendors Default in paying TV channels/Publishers. |
Model Dependent | Contract Value |
7. Financials & Transparency
Modern agreements move away from flat 15% commissions. They focus on transparency. Clients need the Right to Audit to ensure they receive volume bonanzas and rebates earned by the agency.
The Media Authorization Form (MAF)
Financial control is often lost in email threads. A robust agreement mandates a signed MAF for every campaign spend.
Audit & Tax Checklist
EssentialRight to Audit
Verify that media was purchased at declared rates. Ensure pass-through of rebates.
GST Compliance (SAC 9983)
Advertising services attract 18% GST. Distinguish between ‘Agency’ and ‘Intermediary’ for export status.
Stamp Duty
Specify who bears the cost. Maharashtra Stamp Act specifically taxes advertising contracts.
8. The Regulatory Shield
Misleading Ads (CPA 2019)
Fines up to INR 50 Lakhs. The Agency needs an “Ordinary Course of Business” defense. They must rely on data provided by the Client.
Data Privacy (DPDP Act)
The Client is the Data Fiduciary. The Agency is the Data Processor. A mandatory Data Processing Agreement must limit data use to the specific campaign.
9. Confidentiality & Insider Trading
For listed companies, an advertising agency often holds Unpublished Price Sensitive Information (UPSI)—such as new product launches, mergers, or rebranding plans—before the market knows.
SEBI Compliance (PIT Regulations, 2015)
Agencies are classified as “Connected Persons”. The agreement must enforce a “Chinese Wall” policy, restricting information access to only the specific team working on the account. Trading in client stock by agency employees possessing UPSI is a criminal offense.
10. Exit Management Strategy
Agreements often fail to define the divorce. A robust Exit Management Schedule prevents the agency from holding assets hostage during a dispute.
1. The Raw Files
Distinguish between “Final Deliverables” (JPG/PDF) and “Work Product” (Open PSDs, AI files). The contract must explicitly state the Client owns the open/editable files upon termination.
2. Digital Assets
Mandatory handover of all social media credentials, Ad Manager admin rights, and domain controls within 48 hours of termination notice.
3. Transition Period
The Agency agrees to provide transition assistance (knowledge transfer to new agency) for 30-60 days post-termination at a pre-agreed hourly rate.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who owns the “Pitch Work” if the agency is not hired?
The Agency retains ownership. The Client cannot use the ideas unless they pay a “Kill Fee” or purchase the concept rights explicitly.
Can the Client hire the Agency’s employees directly?
Usually no. A Non-Solicitation clause prevents this during the term and for a “tail period” (often 12 months) after termination.
Is the Client liable for ads created by the Agency?
Yes. The Client (Advertiser) is primarily liable under the Consumer Protection Act. The Agency may be liable if they knowingly created misleading content.
What is an SLA-based fee model?
Instead of a fixed retainer, fees are linked to performance. For example, 80% is fixed, and 20% is variable based on meeting KPIs like ROAS (Return on Ad Spend) or Lead Quality Scores.
Template Clauses & Formats
Copy standard clauses or view the full sample agreement below.
“The Agency hereby assigns to the Client, on a perpetual and worldwide basis, all right, title, and interest in and to the Deliverables, including all Copyrights and Trademarks therein. This assignment shall be valid for the full term of copyright and all renewals thereof. The Agency waives any moral rights in relation to such Deliverables.”
“The Agency agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold harmless the Client against any and all claims, losses, damages, or expenses (including reasonable legal fees) arising out of any third-party claim alleging that the Deliverables infringe any Intellectual Property Rights or violate any applicable laws or regulations.”
Full Agreement Format (Reference)
Agreement Between a Company and an Advertising Agency
THIS AGREEMENT executed at ……………….. on this ……………….. day of 20… between [NAME OF THE COMPANY], a company incorporated under Companies Act, 1956 and having its registered office at ……………….. hereinafter referred to as “the company” (which expression shall, unless it be repugnant to the context or meaning thereof, be deemed to mean and include its successors and assigns) of the ONE PART and [NAME OF THE ADVERTISING AGENCY], a partnership firm registered under the Partnership Act, 1932 and having its registered office at …….. hereinafter referred to as “the advertising agency” (which expression shall, unless it be repugnant to the context or meaning thereof, be deemed to mean and include every partner for the time being of the said firm, the survivor or survivors or the legal representatives, executors or administrators of the last survivor) of the OTHER PART.
WHEREAS
- The company is manufacturer of [LIST OF PRODUCTS] hereinafter referred to as “the said products” and desirous to engage the services of an advertising agency for the purpose of advertisement of their products in India and abroad.
- The advertising agency has agreed to act as advertising agents for the company on the terms and conditions hereinafter mentioned.
NOW IT IS HEREBY AGREED BETWEEN THE PARTIES AS FOLLOWS:
- The company appoints the advertising agency to advertise the said products in the newspapers, magazines, journals, cinema slides, video magazines, radio, television or public hoardings as may be determined by the parties.
- The advertising agency shall submit the estimate of cost and method and period of the advertisement to the company and after the said estimate and methods of advertisements is approved by the company in writing, the advertisements will be released to the concerned newspapers, magazines, television centre, etc.
- The advertising agency shall be responsible for preparing all the material for advertising, publicity including art work, photography, cinematography, documentary films, drawing, engraving, advertising writing, preparation of video films for T.V. advertisements and video magazines and if the said works are got done by the advertising agency at its own office with the help of its employees, the company shall pay for the same at the market rates and settled between the parties. If the said works are got done through outside agencies, the company shall pay all expenses incurred by the advertising agency for getting the work done through outside agencies.
- The company shall pay to the advertising agency ……………….. per cent above the cost and other expenses incurred by the advertising agency in this behalf as its commission.
- The advertising agency will be responsible for advertising the said products in India and other countries of the world, wherever the said products are exported or the company proposes to export its products.
- Whenever the company manufactures any new product and launches the same in the market for sale, the advertising agency shall undertake special advertisement campaign for the said new product in consultation with the company.
- The Advertising Agency will not act as Advertisement Agent of any company/person, who is manufacturing similar products and who are competitors of the company.
- The Advertising Agency shall observe the laws applicable and the rules or code of conduct of advertisers associations, association of newspapers or rules prescribed by television and radio.
- The Advertising Agency shall submit a weekly report to the company showing in detail the advertisements given regarding each of the said products separately and showing the dates, the timing or appearance of the advertisements, the names of newspapers/channel of TV given during the previous week. The report shall also accompany the cutting of newspapers/journals/magazines/clippings of T.V. Programme published/broadcast of the products.
- The advertising agency will not infringe any copyright of any person/company while displaying or publishing any advertisement of the company.
- The Advertising Agency shall indemnify and keep indemnified the company against any loss, claims, demands, actions, proceedings, damages, costs, charges and expenses which may be made or brought or commenced against the company for any act contrary to the provisions of this Agreement or due to or resulting from the breach of any agreement between the Advertising Agency and any newspaper/T.V. or any other person relating to the advertisement of the products of the company.
- The company shall indemnify and keep indemnified the Advertising Agency against any loss, claims, demands, actions, proceedings, losses, damages, costs, charges and expenses which may be made or brought or commenced against the Advertising Agency for the publication of any advertisement of the company, which has been prepared on the basis of the material furnished by the company.
- The company’s budget for advertisement is Rs. ……………….. crores per year, and the company agrees and undertakes that it shall get the advertising of its products done through the Advertising Agency.
- This agreement shall be for a period of one year from the date of these presents. However, any party may terminate this agreement before the period of one year by giving two months notice in advance to the other party. In case the Advertising Agency commits a breach of any covenant herein contained, the company is entitled to terminate the agreement by giving one week’s notice.
- On the termination of the agreement, all the advertisement material in the possession of the Advertising Agency will be returned to the company forthwith and will not be used by the Advertising Agency for any other purpose or persons.
- The Advertising Agency shall submit bill to the company every month for the expenses incurred by it in advertising and the company shall pay the bill within a period of 10 days of the submission of the bill therefore. The commission payable to the Advertising Agency shall be payable on the gross value of the work done or undertaken on behalf of the company and shall be paid along with the payment of bill of cost and expenses submitted by the Advertising Agency.
- The Advertising Agency shall also charge service tax on their bills at the rates applicable from time to time.
- The Advertising Agency shall advise the company of the most uptodate, decent and profitable mode of advertisements at moderate rates.
- The company shall Endeavour to keep the agency with sufficient funds to pay the expected charges for advertisement.
- All disputes between the parties hereto arising out of this Agreement or in relation thereto or regarding the interpretation of this Agreement, shall be referred to an arbitrator appointed by the Indian Council of Arbitration, New Delhi and the provisions of the Indian Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 or any statutory modification thereof shall be applicable to such reference.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the parties hereto have signed this Agreement on the day and year first above written.
WITNESSES
1. ………………………………….
2. ………………………………….
Signed and delivered by [NAME OF THE COMPANY]
through its Managing Director
Signed and delivered by [NAME OF THE ADVERTISING AGENCY]
through its Managing Partner
Conclusion: The Strategic Shift
Modern advertising agreements are no longer just about deliverables and fees. They are risk management frameworks. By explicitly addressing IP ownership, data privacy, and financial transparency, companies can transform their agency relationships from potential liabilities into strategic partnerships. The clarity provided by these contracts ensures that when creativity flows, it does so within a safe, compliant channel.








