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Is Your Advertising Agency Positioning “Normcore?”

Peter · May 28, 2014 · Leave a Comment

images normcoreThe June ’14 issue of WIRED reports that “normcore” is a jargon word to watch. Normcore is so vanilla that it reminds me of at least 50% of the advertising agencies. That’s all agencies. Here is WIRED’s definition.

Averageness as a personal style. The apotheosis of anti-fashion, being normcore entails blending in – wearing a baseball cap to the ballpark and a velvet suit to the disco – and always acting like you’re totally into whatever you happen to be doing.

Yo, Is Your Agency Normcore?

How are agencies normcore?

They sound alike. See my long post on advertising agency positioning.

They say the same things: consumer conversations; media agnostic (yes, some still say this); full-service; we are problem solvers; we are creative; we are nimble; we came from large agencies… and on.

They even like to have photos of their reception area on their website.

They serve beer from real-life kegs on Fridays.

I’ll help you free your agency from being normcore. I do it every day for agencies that know that the only way they will succeeded is to be abnormal-core.

Best Read Advertising Blog Posts

Peter · May 27, 2014 · 2 Comments

cher.h9In the interest of sharing, here is a list of my best read / performing blog posts during the past few months. All of these posts are found via a search engine optimized blog; my email newsletter list (sign up for it below); Twitter; LinkedIn; Facebook; my Pinterest agency directory website; guest posts; Reddit and a test I did using Outbrain (nice traffic but not well targeted.)

The Worst Advertising Agency Presentation post went somewhat viral across social media with a special thanks to Facebook. I suspect that the story resonated with the Saatchi & Saatchi and M&C Saatchi universes because it discusses a looser pitch for Adidas I did with Maurice and Charles Saatchi. It is an entertaining, if sad story.

How To Name Your Agency is clearly a hot topic for new and existing agencies. The majority of the other posts address my main topic: agency new business. Thank you SEO Gods.

Next: I am interested in seeing how the brand new 34 Advertising Agency Search Consultants post does in the coming weeks.

The links are hot. Go on and visit some of my best read posts.

Title Views
The Worst Advertising Agency Presentation – Ever More stats 7,301
Hi. More stats 5,239
How To Name Your Advertising Agency: Part One More stats 3,782
Insights More stats 2,926
How to Build A Winning Advertising Agency New Business Program More stats 2,150
I Grow Advertising & Design Agencies More stats 2,007
I can help. More stats 1,665
It’s Me. More stats 1,656
Home page / Archives More stats 1,654
How To Position An Advertising Agency – Part I More stats 1,117
How To Write An Ad Agency Business Plan More stats 1,056
Talking As An Ad Agency Business Development Tool More stats 965
#3240 (loading title) More stats 894
13 Free Big Data Tools For Advertising Agency New Business More stats 718
35 Ways To Start & Grow An Ad Agency More stats 607
How To Name Your Advertising Agency: Part Two More stats 596
How Small Advertising Agencies Can Win Big Clients More stats 587
How To Position An Advertising Agency – Part II More stats 496
Advertising Agencies: “Do Not Pitch” More stats 422
Advertising Agency Business Development & Cold Calling More stats 419
Which Social Media Strategy Is Best For Advertising Agency New Business? More stats 417
Finally, A Fcking Ad Agency Blog Worth Reading More stats 408

Can You Afford New Advertising Accounts?

Peter · May 25, 2014 · Leave a Comment

Can You Afford New Advertising Accounts?

Maybe Not.

A couple of years ago a Portland digital agency, once a high-flyer, closed its doors because of serious cash flow issues. Their last straw was the amount of cash they used to win and startup a large famous account — and how long it took to get any revenue from the client to offset the cost of pitching and on-boarding.

Before the first client payment ever hit the bank, the agency spent three months pitching; added staff to win the pitch; spent time negotiating a compensation and scope of work agreement while they started to develop the programming to support the client’s program and then added more staff to build the relationship — way before the agency could even get the first invoice out. The agency then had to wait over 90 days to get paid. Not smart.

7 Months – No Pay

So, at the end of the day, the agency was in the hole for about 7 months of costly work before they ever get some moolah. This time-lag does not work for small digital agencies.

Did the client care that the agency couldn’t afford to fund the client’s marketing before receiving the first payment? Of course not. According to an Advertising Age article on clients now extending their payment schedule to 120 days, they still don’t. Try this one on for size.

Mars Seeks 120 Day Payment Terms From Vendors

snickersMars isn’t alone in asking its agencies to extend a line of credit. According to Advertising Age, Procter & Gamble, Anheuser-Busch InBev, Johnson & Johnson and Mondelez have also extended their payment terms. Will client’s recognize the pain they are inflicting? Don’t bet on it. Even the ANA can’t seem to get its members to behave.

In a report published late last year, the Association of National Advertisers stated that at least four in 10 marketers lengthened payment terms for at least some marketing services in the preceding year.

“Client-side marketers need to consider what is fair and how they would want to be treated,” the ANA report said. “If the payment terms they are suggesting to their suppliers would not be acceptable to them as suppliers, a re-think might be in order.”

What Can An Agency Do?

Yes, this is a tough one since most agencies are not remotely in the driver’s seat. Why?

  • Most agencies don’t offer services that are so unique that the client can’t go elsewhere.
  • If an agency already has the account, they are at the mercy of their beloved client.
  • They are so hungry for new business that they bend over and then lose a strong negotiating position.

But, If they know that the client wants to screw them before they commit to a pitch they can… yes, this one will be hard to believe: NOT pitch.

So, keep how long it will you to get paid in mind when you decide to pitch an account and when you build a one-sided relationship like the one that Mars wants to have with BBDO.

In this case, its seller beware.

 

Is Your Advertising Agency New Business Invisible?

Peter · May 15, 2014 · Leave a Comment

Are Your New Business Programs Invisible?

How do your future clients find you… or not? Here are 28 rather basic questions you should be asking yourself — often: [Read more…] about Is Your Advertising Agency New Business Invisible?

Does You Agency Ask For The Order?

Peter · May 14, 2014 · 1 Comment

I had an advertising exec friend read the manuscript of my new book on pitching* — its still being edited. She mentioned that I should add that advertising agencies should ASK for the deal when they are closing their presentation.

Ask For The Order

You know, ask for the order. I know that most agencies do not. Interesting, right?

Think about it… they responded to an RFI / then an RFP and then worked their tail off creating a super fine presentation. They delivered their best, smiled and walked out of the room without asking for the account. Most of the time, an agency thinks that their effort alone is serious proof that they want the business. Well, they are right. Any savvy client would realize that the agency is serious.

But, why not add a bit of passion to the end and politely ask for the the account? Or, as Zig Ziglar, one of the leading sales gurus says… A.A.F.T.O. Always ask for the order.

Need more sales inspiration? Here is a SlideShare presentation  by Viru Nigam, an MBA student that I bet has spent more time on Ziglar’s sales techniques than most of us smart, cool agency folk. Take a look. Oh, slide 9 is all A.A.F.T.O.

[slideshare id=33435810&doc=theartofselling-140412001838-phpapp02]

 

*Oh, my book’s title:

The Levitan Pitch. Buy This Book. Win More Pitches.

By the way, go below and sign up for my weekly newsletter. It is free and so refreshing.

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