With a title like the above, you might think we’ve returned to the days of Sarah Palin’s memoir, Going Rogue: An American Life.
But this time I’m not
talking about a “mavericky” Alaskan -- who, along with a very talented PR machine, masterminded a brilliant and profitable 15 minutes of fame. I’m talking about the client-PR agency
relationship and how, despite living in an age of instant communication, some maverick-prone clients fail to keep their PR agencies abreast of what they are planning to say, how they plan to say it,
which media outlets they’re talking to and who’s writing what. It’s as if we’re being undervalued -- a topic I discussed in a recent blog, Proving PR’s Business Value Easier Said than Done, But
Not Impossible.
A recent AdAge article also addresses this
growing advertising agency concern, citing data from The Bedford Group that finds the average client-agency relationship length has fallen to under 3
years versus 7.2 years in 1984 -- a drop of almost 60% over three decades.
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What has changed and why is this happening?
Even my agency has not been immune to so-called rogue clients. A
press release gets drafted without our knowledge. A media interview is conducted without our review and the client is caught off guard. Each scenario is a potential PR minefield.
Notice in the
preceding paragraph that I was very selective in my language, as all PR execs should be. At no point did I say “without our consent” or “without our green light” -- and I think
that’s the problem right there. Turf wars between agency management/oversight and client control. Considering that client-agency relationship lengths are so short, we must do everything in our
power not to step on clients’ toes, or we may be perceived as know-it-alls.
Trust me, we’re not. And in the power struggle that communications can become, clients have the final
say.
That said, there is a reason why we call the client-agency arrangement a relationship and not a doctor-patient review. Clients come to us for creative ways to improve their
brand, not reinvent it. They’re not sick. They’re not dying. Agencies are integral to this team effort. And that collaboration, as I addressed in another blog, begins with thinking about clients less as machine-like
conglomerates, and more like individuals with communication needs that must be met, not serviced.
So what we have here are two partners failing to communicate -- one that is perceived
to be micromanaging (the agency) and one that’s looking to preserve its own voice. As AdAge rightly points out, technology ironically hampers our communication efforts as excessive
emails and meetings trump genuine correspondence and conversations, watering down the quality of our time together.
And since this article began with a political reference, I’ll begin my
wrap-up like this: agencies and the clients they represent need to press the “reset button,” remembering to be transparent about what each side plans to do and when they plan to do it,
within reason. It’s a building block of trust and mutual respect. PR agencies are there to help, not hurt. And we can only do that when clients are honest with us and we are aware of
their intentions. Likewise, agencies must involve their clients actively in the communications and PR outreach process.
Of course, this advice won’t stop all instances of going rogue,
nor will it consign the occurrence solely to our industry. Sometimes, for very deliberate reasons, clients employ elements of surprise to their communications advantage, keeping everyone but their
innermost circle in the dark. The recent shocking resignation of Pope Benedict XVI demonstrates that even inner, inner circles aren’t always privy to the thoughts of one individual.
In most cases, as seems to be the case with Alaska’s former governor, going rogue helps no one, not even the so-called “maverick.” Fittingly, like the drop in client-agency
relationship length, Palin’s Amazon book price has fallen 60% too.
Does your agency have a going rogue problem? Inspired by the data gathered from The Bedford Group, I’d like to
begin collating my own research on the client-agency “going rogue” phenomenon and report our findings in a follow-up article. Beyond the suggestions I have offered, how does your agency
address the problem? Are there examples of a contentious client-agency relationship being healed by an attitude adjustment? Any particularly jarring “rogue moment” that caused your agency
to put its foot down and change communications course? Lastly, like a heart attack, are there any warning signs that rogue has arrived? I would love to hear about your experiences with clients
“going rogue.”