There’s an increasing need for companies of all sizes to be agile in today’s changing economy. Relying on an outside agency to complete critical projects takes longer and can cost
around 20-30% more in markups alone, a luxury many companies can no longer afford. As such, many companies are starting to bring capabilities that would traditionally be outsourced to an agency
in-house.
Having internal expertise in areas such as consumer research, SEO and content development allows teams to iterate and bring ideas to market faster for less. It also means
your company gets the full attention of those resources instead of waiting on an agency juggling multiple clients.
Startups have been some of the earliest adopters of this growing
trend of ditching the traditional “agency of record” model in favor of bringing creative in-house. However, more and more large companies are headed this way or considering it. Tempted to
try the DIY creative route? Here are some of our key learnings on how to pull it off.
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1.Start by bringing your competitive advantage
in-house
For example, grocery delivery services driving interest with pictures of fresh ingredients and food should hire their own photographers and videographers. If
you’re trying to make a complicated and boring category like life insurance more interesting and easier to understand, you should consider hiring content marketers and a stellar copywriting
creative director and in-house editorial team to develop a compelling blog and syndicated articles to bring the concepts alive.
2. Focus on your biggest marketing budget
item
If you’re spending more than 20% of your marketing budget on a certain activity (e.g., paid search, TV advertising, social media, sponsored podcasts, etc.),
you should have a dedicated resource internally for it. For example, because paid search became an increasing share of our growth and marketing budget, we hired an expert who had been doing paid
search in the travel industry. This elevated our internal expertise — and saved about 10% by removing the agency fee.
3. Leverage freelancers for one-off
projects
For creative projects you only do periodically or refresh once per year, like TV commercials, it doesn’t make financial sense to build out your own team.
Instead, leverage the experience of year-round professionals. This way you get access to top talent but don’t have to pay for it every month in your team budget. There are also many freelance
design and creative marketplaces that make it easy to source vetted, professional and affordable creative talent on demand.
Each business is going to make this work in its own
way, and we know it takes time to build out a team with the skills and relationships you’d need to make it work, if that’s what you choose to do. But simply defaulting to outsourcing key
marketing and branding elements to agencies is certainly becoming a way of the past.