There has been a lot of discussion about “rebundling” or reversing the now prevalent agency model of separate agencies for creative and media.
In the late 1990’s, most of
the major holding companies, as well as many clients, had come to the realization that the ever changing and increasingly complex media landscape required far more attention to media than most
“full-service” agencies were then equipped to provide.
The solution was “unbundling”--the creation of media-specialist agencies that offered aggregated buying power and
other efficiencies. The holding companies sold unbundling to their clients as a way to get a “best in class solution,” even if that meant they would have to significantly change the way
they did business. One of the ways that issue was mitigated was reduced cost. Most clients ended up paying less for unbundled services than they did when they worked with a single full-service
agency.
There were, of course, significant drawbacks to this model: Clients were forced to manage at least two agency partners rather than one, and for some, the number of shops on their
roster increased when ultra-specialized agencies were engaged such as search, social, and digital media. But the biggest drawback only became obvious over time: Media and creative agencies
collaborated far less with each other than full-service creative and media departments did under the full-service model.
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In recent years, many of the clients I worked with bemoaned the extra
time required to deal with multiple agencies. And while they mostly accepted the idea that specialist media shops were more likely to provide best-in-class solutions compared to the way media was
handled “in the old days,“ they couldn’t help but wonder if something had not been lost.
Would a “big idea” creative solution be ignored because it didn’t
match up with the media solution being proposed -- or would a media solution that had the potential to drive a great creative idea never reach the creative team on the brand, because the media and
creative agencies rarely interacted? And how is the ever important management of data analytics handled across both agencies?
Insights gained are critically important to both media and creative
strategy. In some cases, clients had to hire yet another resource to manage their data analytics.
A partial answer to those questions was enacted by a few of my past clients, particularly
those who simply hated the endless series of meetings that dealing with multiple agencies required. Instead, they scheduled multi-agency meeting days, which enabled them to brief all of their agencies
at once. That partially solved the problem of agencies not always being on the same page vis-à-vis the client’s issues or strategy.
But a fundamental weakness in the process still
remained: the agencies didn’t interact enough once the meeting was over. So instead of getting a great advertising solution, the clients, in many cases, got good media ideas and
good creative ideas.
Is this unbundled model the best way? Maybe it’s time to find out.
For one thing, a number of stand-alone media agencies have been under the gun in
recent years, driven by the ANA investigations into media transparency, rebates and steering media budgets to more profitable channels. The result has been an endless series of agency reviews as
clients try to get ahead of those problems. Inevitably, some of those reviews ended up being decided almost entirely on price, which resulted in many media shops having to operate on razor thin
margins.
All too often, this simply resulted in a “you get what you pay for” relationship, which serves neither the advertiser or media agency well (even though it’s beloved
by client purchasing folks).
Maybe that’s why we’re beginning to see a revival of the traditional full-service agency model. A few truly innovative creative agencies are bringing
media buying back in house and aggressively investing in the systems, tools and talent necessary to deliver truly integrated creative/media solutions to their clients. Obviously, these commitments are
costly, but at the end of the day, they very well may pay out.
But another trend also needs to be watched closely: clients bringing media capabilities in-house. While some large
brands that experimented with that model recently abandoned the idea due to its cost, the challenge of finding and retaining first-rate media professionals and an inability to keep up with technology,
it is still of great interest to some. And that will continue to be a threat to media agencies.
As the media agency business continues to evolve to automated media buying, will our services
simply not be seen as useful and necessary by clients? Will they want to own “black boxes” themselves, cutting agencies out of the picture altogether? And where does that leave the
critically important strategic side of our business?
Creative agencies are also being challenged. More and more clients are hiring agencies on a project basis rather than on an AOR basis. This
makes it very difficult for them to keep top talent and deliver their best work, not to mention the financial instability it brings -- yet another motivation that positions rebundling in a positive
light.
The answer, I think, could very well be a business model that for more than 100 years delivered great work and generated terrific revenue for clients and fair profits for agencies: the
full-service agency model.
Imagine an entire team of talented advertising professionals working together on behalf of a client -- instead of a disparate group of companies that barely
talk to each other, much less collaborate with each other, competing with each other for pieces of the client’s budget.
Somewhere up in advertising heaven, it’s very possible that
Leo Burnett, David Ogilvy, Bill Bernbach, Raymond Rubicam and Jay Chiat are all smiling, saying to themselves “we could have told them so.” The return to the full-service agency model is
such a provocative idea that it almost seems brand new.