We are rapidly approaching the nonsense -- er, the annual ritual, that is the upfronts and NewFronts. And because it is always about the money, let’s look at some of the money-grabbing
headlines of the last week.
No, this is not about Snapchat being a loss leader in quite the literal sense, in that it is worth over $30 billion apparently, which is more than American
Airlines or Campbell’s Soup — both of which are turning in healthy profits, something that Snap is failing to do. None of the expert reviews I have read since Snap burst onto the stock
market last week provided any clues as to how it is going to make a profit any time soon, but what do I know?
P&G’s Mark Pritchard continued his quest for normalcy in advertiser and
agency holding companies relations, speaking last week at the ANA conference in Orlando. In a measured and highly entertaining way, he dismissed each of the market’s (read: agency’s and
assorted middle men) objections, delivering precise and acceptable demands that would make the advertiser-agency world a better place.
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And now that Unilever has joined the chorus to find
solutions, we can officially speak of a tide that has turned.
And so it goes back to the upfronts and Newfronts. Analysts expect TV ratings to be down by low double-digits year-over-year. But
most analysts are still expecting the market to pretty much sell out and prices to increase modestly. Kind of like Snap: not delivering a sound business, yet rising in price.
That’s not
the case in the U.K. There, the largest commercial TV network (ITV) is reporting a decrease of 3% in advertising spend, the first decrease since 2009. But they are Brexiting, while we are making
America great again, so there is that.
David Cohen, president, North America for Magna Global, IPG’s media-buying operation, last week stated that agencies today are in the intelligence
business. To prepare for the future, “agencies need to be able to analyze marketplace context, understand the business economics (the business of running the business), build trust and
transparency, leverage technology, data and automation and win the talent war with diversity, culture, training and development,” he said.
Yes, please. Do all of that. P&G and Unilever (or the future Kraftilever) might
well be your next big client — or pitch.
Surely, advertisers are also still very much in the driving seat to arrive at the change they so loudly proclaim they want. Per a recent survey,
many (most?) advertisers continue to evaluate the performance of their media agency predominantly on price. And then they associate the agency’s performance bonus with their ability to deliver
on their pricing targets. Guess what happens next?
At the same time, it’s not exactly easy for agencies to continue to claim they are as much victim in the messy marketing world as the
marketers are. WPP just reported that 2016 was a record year, with profit increasing 20.6% to over $1.5 billion. That is money made by servicing advertising accounts, creating strategies and content,
buying and selling media, analyzing and modeling vast amounts of data and a whole range of other services paid for by — yes, marketers (and media owners?).
Luckily we now have a new
4A’s president in Marla Kaplowitz, who at least “speaks media” as she came from media agency MEC. Marla: your move! What David Cohen said!