After several viewings of "The Pitch," I have finally hit the high-water mark on the pain of watching something so far from the truth.
The AMC original series airing Sunday nights purports
to provide viewers with “an intense, gripping, never-before-seen glimpse inside America’s top ad agencies.”
My advertising career began 15 years ago, and I believed then, as
I do now, that it’s all of our jobs to find solutions to business problems and to drive sales for clients’ products and services. Clearly, that isn’t how the briefs are being
written for these competing agencies.
"The Pitch" has managed to demonstrate that the value agencies bring to marketers is a commodity -- an expendable “product” -- and implies
that agencies are nothing more than idea generators.
We are and should be viewed as business partners that help drive revenue growth in the marketplace.
During the Popchips episode,
agencies were asked for a “social idea” in an off-the-cuff, flimsy brief looking for that “one big idea that could really help take our brand to the next level” in the words of
PopChips CEO Keith Belling.
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The winning agency, Conversation, came up with a video and an app -- the big idea, according to the client. I’m sorry to break this to you, but a video and
social aggregator are far from being the pillars of a big idea. These feel like tactics to experiencing a brand. What is the broader platform?
I don't blame the warrior agencies that are
putting themselves out there on national cable TV to go to battle for the glory of winning each pitch in question. My passion for this business is deeply rooted in the quest for new challenges.
If "The Pitch" is to be believed, marketers can easily live without marketing programs and executions grounded in a sound strategy.
Can someone explain to me why we neglect to speak about
the art of “the pitch” and our industry?
Conversation and other agencies dig deep to find the insights that make people tick. Agencies build models for smart consumer targeting to
deliver the right idea, message and placement to the customer. Agencies sometimes create new products and revenue streams for clients. Modern marketing calls for the creation of products and services
to be part of the answer.
Many agencies even manage the back-end technology that powers ad campaigns online to gauge what is working in market and what is not and why it’s working and
why not, and then determine how to change the media mix.
Chase’s mobile application allows you to make a payment or deposit a check by taking a photo of it with your smartphone. The
retail bank is using this app as a focal point of its advertising. What’s being marketed? Is it the app, is it the marketing or is it a message about the app?
Agencies are helping to
build that next branded app, product or service. Ideas today are not a cross-channel message blast. They must add value to customers. As with the Chase app, the messaging itself could be the
marketer’s product.
Let's break down the real world versus "The Pitch."
Real world: A pitch takes an average of three months to complete.
The Pitch: Agencies get one
week.
Real world: Agencies are asked to build a strategic value proposition grounded in a fundamental insight.
The Pitch: The brief fails to mention the consumer targets and what
potentially makes them tick.
Real world: Agencies are asked to build a creative platform that delivers value to customers and revenue for the brand.
The Pitch: Agencies must
demonstrate an idea brought to life to meet a tactical challenge.
Real world: Agencies must understand and deploy a cross-channel performance model.
The Pitch: Hmm, that sounds like a
good idea.
Maybe this show is a testament to the challenges in our business and why our industry is facing commoditization. It is “reality”-based in so much as it’s about ad
agencies competing for a piece of business.
Any resemblance to the reality of the marketing world ends there.