
The latest Association of National Advertisers (ANA)
report on in-house agencies finds that 82% percent of members report having one, up from 78% in 2018.
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An “in-house agency” was defined in the report as “a department, group, or person that has
responsibilities that typically are performed by an external advertising or other MarCom agency” and did not include internal public relations resources. The survey was fielded in February
and March of 2023, with 162 respondents participating.
“This report definitively shows that in-house agencies have become a firmly entrenched part of the holistic marketing ecosystem and are now
a mainstay among a majority of marketers,” said ANA CEO Bob Liodice. “Agencies still play an important role for marketers, witnessed by the fact that 92% of respondents still use
them. But the growth of in-house capabilities has clearly changed the client/agency relationship over the past 15 years.”
The study showed that workloads for in-house agencies continue to
increase with 88%of respondents indicating their in-house shops’ workload increased in the past year, including 67% who said the workload had increased “a lot.” In the 2018
survey, 90% of respondents reported increased workload.
Respondents also said the single primary benefit of an in-house agency was cost efficiency.
Additional benefits include better knowledge of
brands, institutional knowledge, and dedicated staff. Those benefits were consistent and in the same order as in 2018.
Over the past three years, 65 percent of respondents have moved some
established business that used to be handled by an external agency to their in-house agency. The types of services most moved were identified as:
Creative services for digital media: social media,
search, and email.
Creative services for traditional media: print collateral, direct mail, internal communications, out-of-home, and radio.
Media services: social
media and search, media strategy.
The report concluded that Data — specifically the desire to own, control, and protect first-party data — is a driver of bringing work
in-house.
The report also revealed that 54% percent of in-house agencies handle some media planning/buying service. Those who have considered bringing
media in-house but have not yet done so said in qualitative discussions that is because media is “too complex.”