174 years ago, “V.B. Palmer’s” opened its doors in Philadelphia as the nation’s first advertising agency. Founder Volney Palmer pioneered the notion of a business acting as
an agent between advertisers and media companies by representing, organizing, and procuring ad placements.
Back then the media landscape was simple—singularly comprised of
about two thousand newspapers. With its expertise in the space, V.B. Palmler’s quickly became a one-stop shop for advertisers looking to promote their goods and services in the most efficient
way possible. And Volney Palmer’s advertising agency continued to grow and expand as a result.
We all know how the next seventeen decades would play out. Creatively, agencies formalized
the roles of art director and copywriter and held on to that model beyond the print dominated world. As more and different kinds of media entered the landscape, the advertising agencies that
couldn’t evolve their capabilities fast enough were relegated the “traditional” label while nimble specialty shops continued to pop up and gain foothold.
Big brands
suddenly found themselves with a seemingly endless roster of agencies by media type—and also a massive headache. Any given brand could have a traditional agency, media agency, digital agency,
social media agency, mobile agency, CRM agency, experiential agency…and the list goes on. While clients expect their agencies to partner well together, their inherent (and growing) overlap
creates a culture of competition and passive aggressiveness that constantly brews below the surface.
Simply put, a channel-driven agency roster doesn’t work anymore as it leads to
fragmented customer experiences. Today, media is all mashed up and the content that people consume no longer fits into clean “buckets.” The irony is that the very tech-driven revolution
that caused this agency fragmentation in the first place is quickly leading the media landscape back towards a singularity—back towards one media: The connected screen.
We spend
most of our waking hours with the connected screen: Smartwatches, smartphones, phablets, tablets, laptops, and smart TVs. Like the paper in newspapers, the connected screen is the delivery
medium for content and experiences in all sorts of formats. But unlike newspapers (from where the advertising art director and copywriter roles were born), the connected screen makes it easier
than ever for people to avoid messages they don’t want while instantly showing others how they feel.
At a time when consumers can’t wait to press the skip ad button
and where ad blocking is one of the hottest topics in our industry, consumers will direct their attention only to what’s most useful or entertaining to them—at any given moment.
Advertising today is less about adjacency and far more about just being “the thing”—a mix of interactive storytelling (through content) and utility (through technology).
In the connected screen era, art and copy must yield to customer experience and utility—And agencies must re-organize themselves to fulfill consumer needs. As this happens, the days of agency
specialization will give way to a kind of homogenization reminiscent of decades past. Brands’ agency rosters will increasingly get shorter as it’s becoming unmanageable to relegate a given
agency to their assigned “swim lane.”
It’s why ad agencies, PR agencies, and digital agencies are all starting to look and sound the same. It’s why these same
agencies are suddenly finding themselves competing against companies (like management consulting firms) that have never been viewed as material competitors. And it’s also why brands’ own
in-house capabilities are progressively a threat as the trend of insourcing content creation persists. They’re all trying to evolve their capabilities in content and immersive
experiences—and it’s fueling the already existing tension on brands’ agency rosters.
In 1841, Volney Palmer never considered his company a newspaper agency. It was an
advertising agency that made the most out of the one media that just happened to exist at that time. We’re now at a time when traditional, digital, mobile, and social all mean the same thing.
The agencies that will emerge on top will be the ones that let go of their advertising pasts and organize and execute around fulfilling needs for consumers along their journey with
brands—knowing all the way that the connected screen is the one media at the center of…everything.