The Forrester agency coverage team, led by Jay Pattisall, is out with some bold Adland predictions for 2020.
The market research firm believes the major media group holding companies
will centralize their operations and more actively consolidate their buying power, in part to fend off “the looming in-house threat.”
In the third quarter alone, GroupM, IPG Mediabrands and MDC Media Partners have installed new leaders “each with a history of aggregating
and building capacity.”
Meshing and scaling technology, data and agency assets at the group level, Forrester asserts, will boost buying clout. The goal is to "corner the
programmatic market with digital-buying prowess, bringing clients advanced inventory at preferred rates.”
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Client media in-housing grew sharply (nearly 30%) this year, according to
IHAF/Forrester.
“In 2020, we predict a third of in-house agencies will include media operations that control substantial portions of the paid media budget.” The benefit there, per
Forrester, is “the promise of greater transparency, efficiency and control.”
“Automation will reshape the agency workforce,” Forrester predicts. “But not
without sacrifice.” AI and automation will transform 80% of agency jobs in the next decade. As early as next year, staffers in production, project management, account management, strategy and
creative “will see many of their responsibilities automated via workflow technologies, planning/activation platforms, and dynamic creative engines powered by automation.”
Personalized campaigns that are customized with efficiency and scale will continue to grow, thanks in part to creative adtech platforms like Celtra, Jivox and Revjet.
If Forrester is
on target, it looks like the industry can expect more of the same: a lot of change.
The firm sums it up this way: “2020 will be the year that agencies upgrade and deliver more
synchronized, impactful campaigns and experiences. As the industry pursues seamless operations and commercial impact, we expect agencies to finally disassemble what remains of their outmoded model and
reassemble centralized structures and new capabilities strengthened by scaled data technology and creativity.”
CMOs are looking for meaningful impact from their agency programs
— and results haven’t met expectations in recent years, Forrester concludes. “Every agency is feeling the existential pressure of that reality.”