I am very sad, as it looks like I will soon be like the child of divorced parents. In my past life, I have been an agency man for almost as many years as I have been a marketer. I worked
for three venerable agency brands: JWT, Leo Burnett and McCann-Erickson. Then I worked for two equally venerable marketers: The Coca-Cola Company and Anheuser Busch-InBev.
A few
months ago, I wrote an article on the occasion of the Association of National Advertisers’ report, “Enhancing Client/Agency Relations 2015.” In it, the worrying
deterioration of the client-agency relationship was clearly outlined for the U.S. market. And now the news reaches us that in the UK things are actually almost worse, per a recent IPA study (they are
the UK version of the 4A’s). You can click through the slide
share.
If you don’t feel both sad and scared pant-less after clicking through the deck, I don’t know when you will. Both parties feel completely mismatched and
misunderstood. Clients want things like a better understanding of the clients’ actual business (“sell my stuff, grow my business, drive my share – how can you help?”). Agencies
say they don’t have access to the very client people that actually are in charge of this stuff.
Agencies want briefs to develop creative excellence and the time and space to
build long-term brand value. Clients say, “Where is the ROI for those lofty ideas?”
Clients want an increase in diverse talent who can do more than develop traditional
advertising, and do so in a genuinely collaborative way. Agencies say the clients need to develop clear models for collaboration, and build reward systems that would pay and incentivize agencies to do
what clients say they want.
And so it goes on. In the end, this is a custody battle where the poor children (the brands) are tossed back and forth among a variety of parents,
step-parents and care-takers. Nobody wins. The relationship appears to be so broken, that out of the 60 slides in the deck, only one talks about possible solutions. It is slide 60, and it
doesn’t really go much further than stating that the big, broken issues should be fixed, jointly.
My feeling, though, is that something far more radical is needed. I
don’t believe that we can mediate ourselves out of this completely broken relationship. I think it is time to do the right thing, be mature about it and walk away.
What I mean
by that is that agencies, as they exist today, need to completely reinvent themselves. Rather than trying to tinker, repair and plug real financial holes with dubious media deals, I would set up a
completely new agency model if I was Sir Martin, Monsieur Maurice or Mister John. That new agency is not your current digital agency, media agency or even experiential agency. It is the agency that
your smartest people would set up if they didn’t have the constraints of the existing models, money streams, structures, P&L’s and whatever else stands in the way.
Sometimes very smart people break away from agencies and try something new. It usually doesn’t lead to major businesses because, despite the founders’ best intentions, they miss
scale. The big, global networks have scale, resources, smarts and now an urgent need.
Sadly, my guess is that they won’t try, even though the client-agency relationship
has become as dysfunctional as U.S. politics. I don’t see either relationship changing anytime soon.