• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Peter Levitan & Co.

Peter Levitan & Co.

The New Business of Advertising

  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • My Story
  • Resources
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Agency of the Future

Watch As Canada Pitches Clinton & Trump

Peter · August 30, 2016 · Leave a Comment

Canada Pitches Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump

images flagI have worked with a few Canadian advertising and digital agencies on their business development programs. I even went so far as to learn Canadian. Even looked at a map of Canada. Note: my personal research indicates that 94% of USA citizens cannot find Toronto on a North American map.

For some reason, and this is way unexpected, Canadian agencies actually have a serious sense of humor. Something most American agencies do not. Crazy right? See what I mean in this post about unignorable agencies. This post includes Canada’s John St.

A head scratcher… Why don’t more advertising agencies employ humor in their new business programs? In most cases, agencies say close to exactly what the agency down the street says in the same way that the other agency says it. Dumbfounding if you think that agencies are in the business of helping their clients stand out from highly competitive packs.

Humor tells stories. Humor sells. Humor gets passed around. Humor goes viral (like the following video will.)

Now, With Even More Laughs

Today, I offer more from Zulu Alpha Kilo and its pitch for the Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump campaign accounts. As ZAK says:

After winning Ad Age Small Agency of the year in 2016, Toronto-based Zulu Alpha Kilo decided to break into the U.S. market with a tongue in cheek political satire. Frank Zulu is the fictional founder of the agency and a character created for Zulu’s parody website which pokes fun at the absurdities of all agency websites and even Zulu itself.

Ok, on to the Clinton and Trump pitch video.

The wall copy (think Mexicans and emails) alone is worth the price of watching.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEvx7_Lc7Lg&feature=youtu.be

 

 

How To Make More Money

Peter · August 25, 2016 · Leave a Comment

How To Make More Money. Or, The Most Valuable Lessons I learned While Running Internet Startups and Advertising Agencies

US Currency is seen in this January 30,Ah, make more money. A quick story. I was once in a cooking class in Chang Mai Thailand. One of the very funny chefs told us that she could charge more for her stir fries if she cut the carrots into star shapes. This was a very smart strategic decision to easily add a little bit of chutzpah to a dish that could be had all over town. A simple addition that, in the end… “made more money.”

Allow me to state the obvious… Not all businesses are created equal and not all bother to make star shapes. Some have valuable products and services; some are run by charismatic leaders; some are uber creative in their approach; some have a fabulous culture; some are strategic; and some are local, even neighborhood, market leaders.

Regardless of each company’s strengths, to survive in a world of thousands of companies (i.e. consumer options), they all need to be:

Well-Managed.

These insights and strong personal opinions on how to run a profitable business come from my thirty years in global and local advertising agency management and ownership and  CEO and founder of two internet companies.

download fI spent my first sixteen years in advertising as a senior account director, general manager and business development director at Dancer Fitzgerald Sample (New York’s largest ad agency) and in New York and London at Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising Worldwide (the world’s largest agency.) I must have been into large.

In left advertising in 1995 for seven years to be founder and CEO of two Internet publishing and technology startups. To put it mildly, it was great fun to learn how to build websites, invent ad units, grow large traffic and to monetize the first set of Internet advertising programs. Microsoft bought our natural language processing company ActiveBuddy (then called, I’m sorry to say, Colloquis). Millions of people knew Activebuddy for our snarky and smart SmaterChild chatbot.

After my digital sojourn, I moved to Oregon in 2002 to buy a regional advertising agency. In the ten years that I ran the agency, we bought the sports marketing agency Citrus; rebranded and repositioned the company; expanded to two offices and added national clients like Dr. Martens, Harrah’s, Legalzoom, Nike and the U.N.

The following is what I learned during my tenure as a businessman, global account director, big agency business development director, buyer and seller of three agencies and, most importantly, as a small agency owner.

Have A Marketing Plan.

Many (most?) companies do not have an active / current marketing plan. In fact, most don’t have a business plan. Yikes! Having both of these will put you way ahead of your rivals.

My Oregon agency’s business plan helped us grow our account list and increased the agency’s valuation through acquisition; the opening of a second office; the development of an efficient and very creative new business program and the addition of Nike AOR business (which helped us gain even more desirable clients like Dr. Martens, Montana Lottery, and Legalzoom).

Note to the 45+ crowd. The plan also acted as a framework to begin to position the company for an eventual sale.

Be Different.

Create a brand and / or product positioning that differentiates your company from your competition. Right on, you’ve heard this one many times. Good. This just might be the most important thing you can do for your brand and people.

The drill here is to have a distinctive and memorable brand positioning – it’s really a sales proposition — that actively attracts and stimulates interest from the right new clients and customers. This is the important part: 
Just trying to find yet another new way to say “digital” or “full- service” agency or pizza parlor, just might not be good enough – and its really difficult to find a new way to say the same old, and generally non-competitive thing. 
Instead, it might be time to think through some business models and products 9or, how you describe your product) that will more effectively get you to that truly distinctive and compelling sales proposition.

Watch Your Costs.

You are a business first. Control all costs. Cost control just might be the only thing you can totally control.

This sounds obvious, but it is critical in an increasingly low-margin service business like advertising. My metric was that every dollar I paid to someone else was a dollar I couldn’t hand to my kids, staff or pay off the 1992 Porsche 911.

Stare At Your Numbers.

We advertising people are visual so my Citrus Agency CFO created financial dashboards as a graphical management tool. We had detailed monthly financial dashboards tied to our P&L, balance sheet, accounts receivables and owner compensation (this one tended to focus our business decisions.)

We also used a real-time SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) assessment for all major company decisions like mergers and acquisitions, go-no on RFPʼs and to help manage and assess existing accounts and staff.

Only The Best.

google-logo-1200x630Hire only exceptional people – that’s what Google does, so why not you? Do not rush to fill a position. You will often pay for your speed to hire in the long run.

I realize that we are now in a relatively tight labor market. Finding the best, most experienced people is getting more difficult. Here is one of my hiring mantras… [Read more…] about How To Make More Money

Advertising Age and The Future Of Advertising

Peter · January 25, 2016 · Leave a Comment

The Future of Advertising

Display-LUMAscape_2012-04-05Advertising Age recently ran two very interesting and insightful articles about the current and future state of advertising. It’s that time of the year.

In Part One, I offer my take on what I think are the most salient points in The Industry Speaks: 2016’s Top Priorities that delivered a range of industry leader perspectives on issues and opportunities. I’ve edited the original copy and briefly discuss what it means for you Ms. Advertising Agency CEO.

Part Two comes later this week. I’m feeling too cluttered right now.

One big takeaway… clutter. Advertising clutter, technology clutter, social clutter, content clutter, SEM clutter, even personal blog clutter and on.

Article 1: The Industry Speaks: 2016’s Top Priorities

“What’s the No. 1 issue that the overall marketing and advertising industry needs to deal with in 2016? Advertising Age surveyed executives from throughout the business, and heard a surprising range of answers.

Jeff Charney, CMO, Progressive

Everyone’s so concerned about ad blocking and time shifting, but we see a very different threat. Everybody is flooding the web with their own content, hour-by-hour, minute-by-minute. We’re not just competing with our top competitors, or even other brands outside of our category, we’re competing with people’s friends, mothers and self-made celebrities on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, etc. And it’s just getting started.

PL: Yes!!! So much stuff. So much competition for your eyeball and ear. I am currently advising an L.A. based fashion agency and have been digging into fashion and luxury marketing trends. The fashion and cosmetics marketing world has shifted. For example, Revlon’s mindshare competition is now coming from personal tastemaker sites like The Blonde Salad — not L’Oreal and it’s Vogue ads. That was Revlon’s old school competition. But, cosmetics buyers attention is now whipped snapped by dozens of new eyeball options.

Martin Sorrell, CEO, WPP

So number one on the agenda is encouraging companies to take a longer-term, less risk-averse view of the world, predicated on the fundamental truth that marketing is an investment not a cost.

It’s clear from BrandZ analysis that investing in brands works. In the last 10 years, a measurement of the strongest brands from the BrandZ Top 100 as a stock portfolio shows their share price has risen over three times more than the MSCI World Index and almost two thirds more than the S&P500.

PL: Ah, the old argument. Advertising spend is a long term “investment.” OK, yeah, we’ve heard this before. But, Sir Martin backs it up with some facts.

Lori Senecal, global CEO, CP&B

Convention won’t challenge itself. As an industry, we need to help marketers really take control of the technology solutions that unlock opportunities to offer consumers truly inventive, additive, and welcome experiences. But clients, agencies, and consumers will only benefit – and our industry will only thrive – if together with CMOs we can control the necessary technology from start to finish.

PL: A nice wish. Will agencies control the technology food chain? No. Will some savvy agencies build their own technology? Sure. but, the agency world will not be in control.

Maurice Levy, chairman and CEO, Publicis Groupe

Mobile and data.

[Read more…] about Advertising Age and The Future Of Advertising

Advertising Agencies: Time To Laugh or Cry At This Spec Work Video?

Peter · November 5, 2015 · 1 Comment

ADWEEK Shares A Video On How Other Bussineses Think About Doing Free Spec Work

images ,OK, no surprise, it isn’t pretty. Hello Ms. Barista, “I’d like a free capucino to try before I buy?” or Ms. Architect, “Please do a full set of drawings of my new house and then maybe I’ll hire you.”

You get the idea. But, ask yourself, “Should you laugh or cry?”

From ADWEEK’s “Watch People in Other Industries React Hilariously to Being Asked for Free Spec Work”

But Toronto agency Zulu Alpha Kilo really illustrates just how ludicrous it is—in the great video below, in which a guy approaches real men and women (not actors) in other businesses and asks them to provide him with a product or service for free, to see if he likes it before committing to more.

The shop took part in spec pitches during its first two years of operation, but founder and CCO Zak Mroueh abruptly stopped doing so. “We haven’t done a pitch that requires spec creative in five years,” he told Adweek this year. “This approach allows us to support our clients’ brands rather than using the resources our clients pay for to gain new business.”

Now, it wants other agencies to follow its lead. “It’s time we all said no to spec,” says the on-screen copy at the end of the new video.

And Your Advertising Agency?

You have three choices:

  1. Just do the spec.
  2. Just say no.
  3. Better, give clients a reason to hire you that transends having to pitch. yes, this is being done every day.

By the way, I wrote the book on pitching… “Buy This Book. Win More Pitches.” I’ll help you get over spec work.

4 Hour Workweek On Whisky Or Whiskey

Peter · October 13, 2015 · Leave a Comment

Yo, AdMan: Do You Know How To Spell Whiskey Or Whisky?

whiskey-bottles-photoI didn’t until I listened to what I think is one of the most entertaining and informative podcasts from Tim Ferris and his 4-Hour Workweek podcast:

The Tattooed Heretic of Wine and Whiskey, Richard Betts.

By the way, its whiskey in countries with an “e” in their name like the U.S.A. And in Japan and Scotland it’s Whisky. If this isn’t important to you, I suggest you bail on the rest of this blog post. Go ahead, drink more vodka.

The Whiskey Deal Via A Great Podcast

You work in advertising which means that according to recent research you are 67% more likely to drink more wine and whiskey than the average U.S. consumer. What’s more… there is a need to know things about booze because you drink it with friends and the occasional client. Hopefully, an AOR client.

img_4268The super entertaining interview is… C/O Tim Ferris… (You’ve read his books, right?) [Read more…] about 4 Hour Workweek On Whisky Or Whiskey

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 8
  • Go to page 9
  • Go to page 10
  • Go to page 11
  • Go to page 12
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 21
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • Featured
  • Resources
  • Podcast
  • The Big Advertising Agency Resource List
  • ChatGPT Loves Me. Does ChatGPT Love You?
  • How To Start, Grow and Sell An Advertising Agency
  • Which Social Media Strategy Is Best For Advertising Agency New Business?
  • How to Build A Winning Advertising Agency Business Development Program
  • A Faster Path To Become A Leading Advertising Agency
  • How To Move To Mexico
  • The Big Advertising Agency Resource List
  • What Is Your Elevator Pitch
  • Advertising Agency Process and Profitability
  • Check our ChatGpt FAQ Generator
  • Random Marketing And Advertising Resources
  • Bob Hoffman | The Ad Contrarian On Advertising Agency Presentations And Pitching
  • How To Be A Brilliant Podcast Guest
  • Want Advertising Agency New Business Leads? The Ratti Report Delivers
  • How To Manage A Brain On A Zoom Sales Meeting
  • YES! You Can Run A Powerful Zoom Meeting
  • How To Win A Mobile Dating App Client – On Zoom

Post Archive

Subscribe

Subscribe to the Advertising Stories Podcast

Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotify

Contact

Email Peter
Connect on LinkedIn

Peter Levitan & Co.

Copyright © 2025 • All Rights Reserved • Peter Levitan & Co. • Log in