If you are truly interested in
choosing (or keeping) a great advertising agency, we have a few recommendations
to help you do it fairly, to minimize the possibility of choosing the
wrong agency (or getting rid of one that you should have kept), and
to maximize your potential for choosing the right agency,and helping
them to become the perfect agency.
Build
a list of advertising agencies that have come to your attention as
you have gone through the normal business cycle. It may be a persistent
firm that has kept in touch. It may be a campaign that caught your eye.
It could be another company's advertising agency that they have spoken
highly of. But, there should be something about them made you remember
the names and mentally file them away for when you might need them. If
you don't have any in mind, ask business owners who you respect
and whose marketing you have admired for some names for the list.
But, make it a short list, two or three should do it.
Discuss
the possibilities with the agency President and Creative Director,
and include their top account executive. This is a chemistry check. Remember
that agency people are often very different from other business people,
and that's a good thing. Agency people need a lot of varied experiences,
expecially creative agency people. They will be very different from most
business people. Absent minded, contemplative, seemingly irrelevant in
their comments, they may not be on time, they will probably have an odd
sense of humor, and they will be certainly be curious to a fault about
everything. Remember what they do for a living: they take other people's
ideas and make them fly. They will do exactly that if you let them.
Don't
bother touring the agency's offices. Don't bother meeting the other
agency employees. They say laws and sausages are two things you never
want to watch being made. Advertising is another one. Deal with the key
people and look over their work to date. That's the only way. Everything
else is egos and preconceptions and these things have nothing to do with
great advertising. Avoid making them jump through hoops that make you
feel better.
Ask
to see what they consider their strongest campaigns and then review
them carefully with the agency. Limit this to just the top two or three
campaigns. Each campaign, when the story is told honestly and heard with
intelligence, is very interesting in and of itself. It won't be, "They
assigned it and we did it." There's always a lot more to a great
campaign than that. Listen for their style of work, their ingenuity in
action, and their resourcefulness. See if you like their style of attack
and communication. Watch for a commitment to success and evidence of
putting
their client's interests ahead of their own. Then look carefully at the
details of the campaign. Attention to detail is a sign of professionalism.
Choose
the agency whose creativity INTERESTS you the most. Being wowed and
impressed is vastly different from finding the work creatively interesting
and informative, and from being genuinely engaged by intelligent professionals
who can do it over and over. Selling is just talk. Great advertising
is true performance. Be the kind of client who likes and appreciates performance. They say that the first chapter of a book is the easiest to write, and a jazzy presentation in a spec campaign is the easiest thing to do in agency work as well. But campaigns and marketing go on and on. To be successful you are going to need an agency team that can perform over and over and over again. Razzle dazzle in a sales pitch, while fun to witness, may actually be more a comment on the commitment to new business development of the agency than on the sustained creative effort you are going to need. There are two kinds of advertising agencies: ones with
a working ethic and others with a selling ethic. Both have their place,
but which one is for you?
Once
all of that is done, and one agency is singled out, talk about what
the agency charges. Try to understand how they make their money and
let them know that you want them to be profitable. David Ogilvy said
it
best, "Never haggle over the agency's compensation." It is
a very damaging thing to do. Questions are always welcome. Clarifications
and estimates ahead of time are great. Constant communication saves many
a misunderstanding. But the most creative work always flows to the best
clients. And that's the truth. So, come to understand what is going on,
and how they do it. Decide early on that you want to be the best client
they ever had. And then really work at it. It may catch them by surprise,
but if you've done a good job in making your decision, they will catch
right on. Remember, the best work always goes to the best clients.
After
your choice is made, let them do the job you hired them to do. Bad ads, bad advertising, bad commercials; these are everywhere. That
should be a warning to you. Don't establish a committee. Be positive and decisive; communicate your decisions quickly. Waiting to hear what you think has a bad effect on creative people. Remember, make the agency feel that what they are accomplishing is the most important thing your company is doing. The optimism that this culture conveys is a very important element of marketing success. Never say, "It does nothing for me." If it does nothing for you, it is at least partly your responsibility, because the advertising agency was trying to make your idea fly based on discussions with you. So, if something is off base, encourage them and remind them that this is a process and each step forward is a step closer to success. Don't change the way your company processes agency work and ideas. Have a dependable system that works with dispatch. Don't bicker about the bills, it's too late by the time the invoice arrives. Establish pricing early in the project. Don't nitpick the copy, that's just stupid. Remember, you hired them so you are in it together. It should never be you vs. them. If it is, you should be fired, not the agency.
And,
remember, behind all great advertising, there is always a great
client.
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