Advertising is broken right now. It’s a creaking machine built for another age. We’ve made mistakes, and we don’t have the balls to do what we need to: to rebuild it from scratch.
It’s a $300 billion-a-year global industry that’s working for nobody -- consumers, media owners, agencies or brands -- yet the softly beating pulse of the global recovery means that few
have the urgency or brevity to rebuild a system that is not fit for the purpose.
We went wrong with our obsession with verticals -- splitting media from creative in the '70s was bad enough,
and it paved the way for channels like brand, PR and CRM to appear. By 2005, we had added interactive, which then became digital before we added social, content and mobile.
In 2014, it’s
not unlikely that a medium-sized, single-brand, single-nation brand may have 12 types of agency, each mirrored by a client lead. It could be well beyond social and mobile. They could have a commerce
agency, an innovation agency, and they may be on the edge of what I think the next agency type will be -- a digital transformation agency.
If you think that’s bad, spare a thought for
large global clients like Unilever, which had 400 “digital” agencies alone in 2012. How does anyone begin to manage such an array? How do people work with such overlaps? How does anything
get done?
Our failed structure is a cathedral that our agencies selfishly hope will make money. Our self-defined silos reflect how commissions were once paid, how projects are most easily
defined, how skill sets are most easily classified, and how clients can most easily procure -- but they don’t come close to reflecting how people see media or what the new media environment
looks like.
We only made one mistake. In 2006, when interactive renamed itself digital, we became obsessed with the verticalization of our industry. From social to mobile, we have added new
techniques as verticals, when they should have been horizontal.
If we had created a matrix, things would be better. We’d have media, advertising, CRM, PR and brand as key verticals, but
we would make social, mobile, innovation, and content horizontals. We would not have social agencies working on a social strategy, but advertising agencies working with social in mind. We would not
have mobile agencies working on mobile campaigns, but CRM agencies including mobile in their campaigns.
The one agency we would never have is a digital agency. Digital is like electricity --
it’s of vital importance and everywhere, but it needs to become so pervasive that we no longer even think of it as a thing.
In this new matrix, we would see a halving of agencies and a
reduction in complexity. We would see more holistic campaigns and easier working arrangements and less politics. We would not see a reduction in our workforce -- we’d just spread the talent in
the horizontals back into the verticals.
But I’d like to take it one step further.
To keep CRM apart from advertising seems odd, and to have media as a separate unit makes less
sense than ever. I’d love to see CRM, advertising, brand, PR and media come together as one, but to slice campaigns in a whole new way -- based on a McKinsey-like three-horizons approach.
We’d have short-term performance marketing looking at everything in the advertising and marketing world that would be happening in the next three months. We’d have SEO, real-time
marketing, programmatic buying, and content marketing all working together with a focus on the now.
We’d have brand marketing working from three months to 12 months out on ways
to tell stories, maintain brand image, and to use traditional and new ad techniques to build brand equity. And long-term marketing -- where technologists, futurists, product designers and planners all
craft the future of the brand -- would have a focal point 12 months out and beyond. That would be to protect them from a future that few can make the time now to think about.
It’s big
bold stuff, it’s here to provoke and to raise questions, and it’s not a perfect answer -- but maybe, just maybe it’s better than what we have now.