It wasn't that long ago that I was involved in a project where a household brand had an array of representatives from its own marketing team as well as some members of its top-ranking, very famous
London agency. The project had come about only after numerous high-level meetings which involved, again, lots of agency people around a table as well as the brand's people.
My takeaway from
the process? Not only far too many people, but far too many Millennials telling awestruck in-house Millennials what they should do with the brand that someone had mysteriously entrusted to the hands
of people who weren't the market for the product. It kept occurring to me that just about everyone at the table had likely been an intern just a year or two ago, and here they were making decisions
over a household brand and a huge budget. Or rather, here the in-house team was nodding along as they were told what to do with the brand they were looking after by the people who like to receive big,
fat cheques.
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Yes, I may sound like a grumpy old dinosaur, but I didn't have a dog in the fight. There was no skin coming off my nose, so I can tell it as I saw it. I was just surprised why so
many bright people inside a brand needed to be told the flipping obvious by a bunch of people who didn't know the brand as well as they did. I asked a friendly brand person whether this was typical.
They rolled their eyes and said "yes."
The big, swanky London agency had been given a pile of money by someone so high up they chain they would never deal with them again -- and ironically,
that gave them the upper hand in any meeting. The inference was they spoke for the guys at the very top who signed the cheques so any young, impressionable executive from the brand would have to be
pretty foolhardy to have an alternative point of view or even consider counting how many people were round the table and asking whether everyone was necessary.
I have heard of this scenario
time and time again. A huge London agency gets put on a massive retainer and then starts to own the relationship with the brand to the point where the client seems to just send Millennials to meetings
to nod along -- and the circle keeps spinning. The cleverest thing of all? The Millennials at the brand think the people around the table with them are good friends rather than business people working
on moving up their billable hours.
If you think it's just me, take a look at the latest ISBA research. It showed that advertisers are trying to move away from this feeling that they are owned by the trendy London agency with initials on the door
and beanbags in the foyer. Two in three, ISBA found, are moving toward fewer relationships with fewer suppliers.
This isn't just to simplify projects, but also to speed them up -- two in three
cited concerns with the time it takes agencies to turn around work. Again, nearly two in three are now seeing moving functions in-house as a way to keep brand expertise in-house, and just over half
feel this will make working with other teams easier. A third of those surveyed already have an on-site agency because of the better cost and improved collaboration it offers.
So the direction
of travel is toward the brand. The stop-off point right now may well be embedded execs, but whether that will transform into more being done in-house remains to be seen.
I get the feeling that
more advertisers would like the help of agencies without the feeling that they can't breathe without them. They simply don't want massive, retained teams in plush offices telling them what they should
be doing any more. They want smaller teams that are more cost-effective and easier to manage and remember the most important thing in any client relationship -- who is paying the bills.