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Smart Agencies

Is Your Ad Agency Loved? Use The Net Promoter Score.

Peter · January 10, 2014 · Leave a Comment

Every January I asked my agency’s senior advertising clients “How we doin?” Actually, I asked the question  cloaked  in a slightly more sophisticated query. Sounding like Governor Christie or the Sopranos [“How we doin?” ] might not work as well.

Our more sophisticated approach to determining if our ad agency was loved used the concept of Net Promoter Score to help us dig into the heads of our clients. We wanted to know if they were truly satisfied with the agency and our services.

We managed our request with the understanding that clients are very busy and that having a long questionnaire would add more work to their already busy day. We found that the concept of Net Promoter Score helped us meet our annual survey needs and showed our clients that we were smart. There was one more fabulous business-building benefit as you will see.

Net Promoter Score

The concept of the Net Promoter Score (NPS℠) was developed in 2003 by Fred Reichheld, a partner at Bain & Company. The objective of the NPS is to determine how well an organization generates relationships worthy of loyalty. As Bain says:

Net Promoter System℠ is based on the fundamental perspective that every company’s customers can be divided into three categories. “Promoters” are loyal enthusiasts who keep buying from a company and urge their friends to do the same. “Passives” are satisfied but unenthusiastic customers who can be easily wooed by the competition. And “detractors” are unhappy customers trapped in a bad relationship. Customers can be categorized based on their answer to the ultimate question.

The best way to gauge the efficiency of a company’s growth engine is to take the percentage of customers who are promoters and subtract the percentage who are detractors. This equation is how we calculate a Net Promoter Score for a company:

measure-of-success

 

 

 

 

Our Technique

We sent the NPS questionnaire, which asked the simple question along with the opportunity for the client to elaborate on why they gave us a particular score, with the following letter. It worked for us and might for you. Oh, it also subtly told clients that is was cool if they in fact referred us. We liked referrals… Referrals delivered motivated new business prospects that came with a higher degree of motivation, shorter sales cycles and a higher close rate.

Here is how my agency Citrus delivered the questionnaire:

Ms. Cynthia Johnson

SVP Cheif Marketing Director

Widgets R U, Inc.

Re: 2004 Citrus Client Survey

Dear Cynthia,

Every year Citrus asks its clients if they would fill out a multi-question agency evaluation form. This evaluation process helps us to know if we are providing the level of service our clients expect and need. The survey also asks if there are any additional agency services that Widgets might want us to provide in the future. We have used the input of our clients in the past to modify our service offering, when required.

This year, we are going to take a different approach from the multi-question survey we have used in years past. In 2004 we are only going to ask one question:

“How likely is it that you would recommend Citrus to a friend or colleague?”

We are basing this question on research findings reported in the Harvard Business Review article “The One Number You Need to grow.” This very interesting article suggests that there is one simple question that can provide much of what a company needs to know about how its customers perceive its services. As the article states, “You simply need to know what your customers tell their friends about you.” The HBR article is attached for your information.

Please take a couple of minutes and help us help you by completing the enclosed survey. Our goal is to keep building a better agency for all of our clients.

If you have any questions give me a call. As always, your answers are considered confidential and will only be shared with agency management.

Thank you for your time.

Sincerely,

Peter

It Worked

The letter and Net Promotor question told our clients that we were interested in knowing how they rate our services; that we are smart enough to know about things like Net Promoter Scores and that we, as I stated earlier, like to be referred.

Give me a call if you need more business building insights for your agency. As you can see, smart business development tactics include how you talk with your current clients. There is gold in them thar relationships.

 

 

 

Best Ad Agency Time Management Tool (Its Free!)

Peter · December 24, 2013 · Leave a Comment

Sure you can buy tools like Basecamp, workamajig and Workzone. But, before you buy these time management tools to manage down your over flowing days, I suggest that you…

Clean Out Your Inbox!

You will do this by using Unroll.me. This wonderful web app digs into your email account’s archives to find those pesky subscriptions that you are currently spending way too much time deleting (but not forever.) Unroll.me (painlessly) gives you the option of keeping or jettisoning the subscriptions you do not want to receive. You can roll the ones you love into one master email.

Unroll.me showed me that I was subscribed to over 50 email lists. It took me about 2 minutes to unsubscribe from over 30. I view any way that I can tame the email beast easily and for free is a very good thing.

Unroll.me

Stay tuned for more tool tips.

San Francisco Ad Agency Heat Asks For The Order

Peter · December 22, 2013 · Leave a Comment

San Francisco’s ad agency Heat does a little bit of new business on its client page (a page that all wanna be clients scope out.) Nice, subtle… Scroll down.

Heat   Clients

Technology Insights For Ad Agencies: Fred Wilson of Union Square Ventures

Peter · December 21, 2013 · Leave a Comment

FredSmart collection of insights for ad agencies to think about and absorb from Fred Wilson of New York’s VC firm Union Square Ventures.

Here are some of the mega-trends Fred thinks will shape the future of technology and where he is placing Union Square’s bets — the list itself is instructive.

Transition to technology-driven networks from bureaucratic hierarchies. His examples include Twitter replacing newspapers – crowd as reporter and editor; YouTube facilitates video creation; SoundCloud allows us all to be all audio creators. More? Codeacademy and Kickstarter.

Unbundling as in how products and services are delivered. Buy just what you want. Industries going through unbundling… banking (Lending Club, Funding Circle); asset management services; education (from classic university model to live streaming and physical libraries to tablets); research (Science Exchange.); entertainment (from bundled cable to Hulu and Chromecast and )

Smart Phones. We can do everything on our phone. We are all nodes on the network — we are all connected all of the time. Examples: Transportation via Uber; payments ala Square and Dwolla.

These are some of the areas that ad agencies need to be thinking through. Shifting trends will shape the ever shifting advertising and design world. if you are not thinking ahead you will not make it.

Half of Advertising Agency Staff Hates Pitching

Peter · December 15, 2013 · Leave a Comment

frownAn Advertising Agency Staff That Hates Pitching Isn’t A Good Thing

A 2013 study by the research firm Provoke Insights confirmed what we all know. The advertising agency new business pitching process can be debilitating.

From Provoke:

“… approximately half (47%) of advertising professionals surveyed by Provoke Insights say they are dissatisfied with the current internal approach to pitching.

47%. Ok, pitching is intense. So, what else is new? Pitching is also intense for architects, nuclear power plant designers and fighter jets salespeople. Writing, presenting and winning (or losing) pitches is intense.

It can also be exhilarating (more on that a bit later.)

Other findings on pitching:

Issues include: “unrealistic timelines” say 66% of respondents / “long work hours” say 65%

And, because Provoke is a research company who paid for the research, we get this nod towards having insightful insights:

“Forty-four percent of advertising professionals stated that if there were better availability of research and data, pitches would run smoother and (be) more successful.”

Here’s more on what resources agencies say they need to kill it:

support_need_to_pitch

 

By the way, I posted about how to use free, smart internet based tools to create insights here: 13 Free Big Data Tools For Advertising Agency New Business.

Back to exhilarating.

  • Pitches are a major way agencies win new business. Ya gotta be in the game. Maybe Droga5 can get away without pitching.
  • Pitches make sense if they make sense. Don’t pitch just any account just for the sake of pitching.
  • Pitches are team sports and, importantly, build team spirit.
  • Pitches help agency staff stand out and be stars. Especially important in larger agencies.
  • Pitches are fun to run if you know what you are doing and have a solid plan.
  • Pitches, winning pitches that is, can make the agency happy and richer. A good thing.
  • Pitches hone agency thinking; highlight skills and help agencies think about what the agency actually has to offer or needs to build for the future. I think that the benefit of forced introspection is underrated.

The full report can be read on AdRants.

I’ve tried to make the art and science of pitching more successful and even fun. Just read my book. Look up top to learn more and make that all important purchase that will lead to more — wins.

 

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