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Advertising Agency Management 101

Peter · December 17, 2023 · 1 Comment

22 Advertising Agency Management Lessons

advertising agency managementI’ve had deep conversations with hundreds of advertising agency management leaders on how to manage and grow their agencies — full-service, specialists, digital, and PR. I am about to condense these down to 22 core lessons.

I feel the need to have you visit The Big Advertising Resource List. Now or after you read my 22 insights = grow your agency ideas. i include some AI resources that can help you streamline your in and outbound content and BIG ideas.

Me.

I’ve been working in the advertising, digital, and Internet startup worlds since the end of the Mad Men era. My global and regional clients and new business wins include J&J, Intel, Nabisco, Northwest Airlines, and Nike. I’ve built websites and digital programs for Microsoft, Nabisco, Honda, LegalZoom and more. I founded, invented, and ran the best-read online news website and invented industry-leading marketing bots.

I’ve made hundreds of business decisions. Some were brilliant and some were “learning experiences.” I’ve decided to share my top 22 business-building and management lessons with you. No, I am not so crazy to think that these will instantly make your advertising agency the next Droga 5. But I do know that most of these lessons represent best practices that, if followed, can help make you more successful. That means being richer and happier.

Quick Advertising Agency Management History

The path that got me here included sixteen years at Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising Worldwide as Business Development Director North America, General Manager of the Minneapolis office, European Director in London, and Management Director in New York. I left advertising for seven years to be CEO and founder of two Internet publishing and technology startups. One, NJ.com, was a major online newspaper that was larger than the NYT for a couple of years. Microsoft bought the other company that created technology that allowed people to have meaningful ‘human’ conversations with a computer (pre-SIRI). If you were online in the early 2000s, you might have talked with our SmarterChild bot on instant messaging platforms. Over 20 million people did.

After my digital sojourn, I moved from New York to Oregon in 2002 to buy the advertising agency RalstonGroup. In the ten years that I ran the 2-office agency, we bought the sports marketing agency Citrus, took their name, and added clients like Dr. Martens, Legalzoom, Montana Lottery, Nike’s college and Major League Baseball AOR accounts, university accounts, and the U.N.

I sold Citrus in 20013 and write about that sale and the other buys and sells I’ve done, plus how to add value to your agency in the PDF book you can get by signing up for my newsletter or just ask me via email – peter@peterlevitan.com.

By the way, I now run an agency consultation business. Hopefully, that’s why you are here on my website. I help agencies find their positioning sweet spot and build action-oriented business development plans that create significant market differentiation and make the agencies Unignorable. My experience as a consultant and the opportunity to look under the hood of many agencies has confirmed that the following ideas can help add value to most, if not all, agencies.

22 Lessons (OK, Advice)

I offer my advertising agency management thinking as advice. There are many types of agencies and not every pearl of wisdom will work for every agency. However, there are some basics that I think you should listen to and modify accordingly. I know this because I have done planning with two-person agencies up to the holding company level.

OK – GO

1

Have a two-year agency business plan. You’d be surprised how many agencies do not have even a basic business plan – like knowing how they make money. My agency’s plan helped us grow the agency’s valuation through an acquisition, open a second office, pitch and add Nike AOR business (which helped us gain even more desirable clients) and develop a focused; high-energy; 24/7 new business program based on direct marketing and social media. —- Note to the 45+ crowd. The plan also acted as a framework to begin to position the agency for an eventual sale.

2

Create an agency brand positioning that differentiates your agency from the other 4,000 agencies out there. I know, I know, you’ve heard this one before. But, having a viable agency brand positioning is critical. More importantly, have a powerful & unignorable brand positioning — in reality, it’s really a sales proposition. One that actively attracts and stimulates interest from the right new clients. Here is the most critical thing I learned in my own agency’s positioning development process: Just trying to find yet another new way to say “digital” or “full-service” agency isn’t good enough. It’s really difficult for any agency to find a brand new way to enunciate the same old and generally non-competitive pitch like “full-service.” Some potential clients might want full-service but find a way to say it with style. Note I  have a great example from a London agency that runs global Fortune 500 campaigns out of one office.

Maybe you should go even further. Given the rapid pace of change in our industry, it might be time to think through some agency of the future scenarios and business models that will more effectively get you to a   truly distinctive and compelling sales proposition that lasts more than six months. Double-digit growth areas like mobile or video marketing might be smart places to start.

3

You are a business first. Control all costs. 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.

4

Stare at your financial numbers – often. We, advertising people, are visual types so Citrus used dashboards as a graphical agency 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 agency SWOT assessment for all major agency decisions like mergers and acquisitions, go-no on RFPs and to help manage existing accounts and staff.

5

Be concerned if any single client accounts for more than 25% of your revenues. When we added two Nike AOR assignments, I got nervous in addition to elated and accelerated our new business outreach to add other accounts. Give me a shout and I’ll tell you how we added Harrah’s Casinos during that effort.

6

Learn how to say no to clients and prospects who want too much free or low-cost brainpower. Your brains, ideas, and pixels are all you have to sell. Charge like a lawyer or even SEO specialists that charge like lawyers. It is time for our industry to exhibit some self-control. If you have to give too much away for free, it might be time to examine the value of what you are selling and the mindset of your client or prospect.

Also, say no to the wrong RFPs and pitches.

7

Think about an alternative to the notion that brainpower and creativity are all you have to sell. Take some of that brainpower to find out how to create a product or service of your own that can easily be replicated and sold over and over. Create or buy some Intellectual Property. This can be done and does not require scientists from SpaceX. Think like a “start-up,” and hey, “let’s build some IP” can sound like an obvious panacea. However, there is gold in them thar hills that do not require moon landings. There are agencies teaming up with brewers to create new craft beer brands, agencies moving into valuable yet fast and cheap research and agencies like Wieden+Kennedy and RGA becoming start-up incubators. I asked W+K why they are doing this. The answer… they are investing their brains and experience to make more money in a world that Mad Men couldn’t have conceived. If you need seed money for a new venture, try crowdfunding.

Think big like the kid down the street. I bet your team could build one of the more effective Kickstarter sites.

8

Hire only exceptional people – that’s what Google does so why not you? Do not rush to fill an open position. You will pay in the long run. You can train people but you cannot increase their IQ. Once on the team, make sure to keep all employees are firmly in the loop via scheduled agency meetings and email agency updates. It takes more than a foosball table to build a business-building culture. CEOs need to talk it up. I have always subscribed to Tom Peter’s management concept of MBWA. Look it up.

9

Reward only your best employees. You don’t owe anyone anything. There is no question that an exceptional employee is as valuable as two marginal people. Does this sound harsh? This approach beats not having investment capital for growth or having to go out of business because you were a bit too magnanimous.

10

Miscast or problem employees should be dealt with earlier than later. Gary Vaynerchuk has fired the “wrong” hires within their first two weeks.

11

Grow your digital assets faster. Bring on more technologists (FTE or freelance) to leapfrog even early adopter digital agencies. Pick a growth area. It’s not too late to become the smartest TikTok agency (no one is yet.) Not even the big boys have TikTok figured out. However, it may be too late to be known as the best “social media agency” given the vast sea of social experts. One more digital point, and I know that you know this — digital agencies have a higher multiple than full-service agencies. If you want to sell in the next three years, you best add MORE valuable digital skill sets.

12

Please provide exceptional client service. All AE’s must know how to think like a client in order to anticipate client needs and address any potential issues before they materialize and metastasize. Consider sending your AE’s to an AE class where they learn advertising agency management, customer care, how to intelligently upsell clients, how to retain clients, and how to charm. The worst call I could ever imagine is a client telling me that our account service sucked. It’s just too easy to fix. Fixing creativity is much harder.

13

Process rules. Create an agency work process that is dedicated to profitability. Manage your scope of work promises.  Then stick with it. The ever-elastic creative process must be tamed. Agencies that do not manage scope of work die. If you need a work process template ask me and I’ll shoot you one. [Read more…] about Advertising Agency Management 101

Advertising Agency Process and Profitability

Peter · December 12, 2023 · 1 Comment

Get This Right – Your Advertising Agency Process Delivers Profit

advertising agency processWarning: While not as sexy as a new TikTok marketing plan, this in-depth 3,500-word post is all about creating and running a killer advertising agency process that will help your agency make, here it comes, more money. Process, as in managing and controlling your time, costs, and being efficient will deliver greater profits — and much happier clients and staff.

Process, having a process, is one of the key elements of my business development and client management consultancy. I get into the weeds on this every day with my clients. You cannot be efficient and a money-making machine if you do not have a clear path – a plan that you repeat for each client and every element of your agency sales plan.

By the way, if this post is too long for your online perusal, I’ll send you a PDF version. Just email me at peter@peterlevitan.com 

Process = Big $$$$

A bit of background. When I worked at Saatchi & Saatchi one of the accounts I ran was Northwest Airlines. At that time, a time when airlines spent big bucks, their media budget was $60 million per year. At the standard 15% commission, we generated $9 million in agency revenues. $9 million! Ah, the good old days. Days when an agency minted bucks even if some of our processes were a bit wanky.

This isn’t the case anymore.

Today, process: the art and science of managing client relations, agency staff, expenditures, and time, is critical to profitability.

A Wonderful Advertising Agency Process Plan = $$$$$

I have a Texas advertising agency client that isn’t anywhere near as profitable as it should be. Their problem isn’t having the right clients or clients that want great work, or clients that spend money. Their problem is not having the right workflow process to ensure that these clients are profitable.

And, worse, because the agency appears to be always overworked, they don’t have the time or energy to run a smart and consistent new business program. A 24/7 program.

I built this client process plan for them and thought, why not share it? To protect the innocent, this full-service ad agency has been renamed… Wonderful Advertising. I think that these general principles and actions can be applied to any communications agency type.

The Wonderful Agency: Background

Wonderful is an integrated marketing communications agency based in Dallas. Wonderful describes itself as (from Wonderful’s Twitter profile):

“A full-service advertising and marketing agency blending traditional and non-traditional media with digital services, graphic design, and social media.”

A bit boring, but at least they’ve made a statement.

Wonderful: Management Issues

Wonderful is entering a next-stage business phase where it would like to add larger national clients to its roster. In order to do so, it would like to set up client management systems to improve its workflow efficiency and improve and manage its client relationships, and most importantly… increase agency profitability. The agency must also build a business development system that will help them entice and land the type of clients that they need for agency growth. [Read more…] about Advertising Agency Process and Profitability

Podcast Guest Proposal

Peter · December 6, 2023 · Leave a Comment

A Podcast Guest Proposal – The How To

podcast guest proposalI’ve been on over 100 podcasts as both a guest and interviewer. I love being a guest because I can “borrow” the host’s audience. I get eyeballs and links back to my website and LinkedIn profile.

To be a guest you need to have something to say, hopefully different. In my case I have a new book to promote. How To Build A Kick-Ass Advertising Agency. Yes, check it out.

Back to My Podcast Guest Proposal

Here it is. Note that it says who I am. Delivers a why interview Peter. Discusses my marketing energy that will help promote the podcast. And, provides some links to help the host figure out who I am.

Here you go… The Proposal

Peter Levitan – An Experienced Podcast Guest

Peter Levitan is a leading marketing industry consultant on the art and science of running advertising, digital and PR agencies. His client base is global.

Why Interview Peter. 

  • Peter has been on over 90 podcasts. He gives compelling interviews. And knows how to promote shows.
  • Peter’s new book, “How To Build A Kick-Ass Advertising Agency” was recently published.
  • Peter’s “The Levitan Pitch. Buy This Book. Win More Pitches.” is considered a marketing agency pitch bible.

Peter’s History.

During 16 years at Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising Worldwide Peter ran business development across Europe and the USA, was EVP Management Director in London and New York and was GM of the Minneapolis office. His client base was Fortune 500.

He was CEO and a founder of two major Internet startups during the dotcom boom. Advance Publication’s New Jersey Online was an early leader in online news (it was named the best online newspaper by the Columbia Journalism Review).

Peter’s natural language intelligent bot company ActiveBuddy (and its famous SmarterChild) beat Siri, Alexa and AI. The company was sold to Microsoft in 2006. A recent TechCrunch article on SmarterChild.

From 2002 to 2012, he owned Citrus Advertising in Portland, Oregon. His clients included Nike, Harrah’s Casinos, Dr. Mareins, Legalzoom, Montana Lottery, the U.N., and multiple healthcare and financial services accounts. He sold the agency in 2012.

Peter has advised over 100+ advertising, marketing, design, and PR agencies on their business practices.

Accomplished Author, Thought-Leader, Speaker, Podcast Interviewee.

He has spoken at the 4A’s, the Association of National Advertisers, Newspaper Association of America, Radio Advertising Bureau, international and regional advertising orgs, HubSpot’s Inbound, and at marketing universities in Mumbai and Delhi.

Peter has appeared on dozens of podcasts. Including Mitch Joel’s “Six Pixels Of Separation”, “HubSpot”, “Ponderings From The Perch”, and “Agency Management Institute”.

Potential Podcast Promotion Energy.

Peter is an accomplished thought-leader with 850+ blog posts. He has over 5,000 Followers on LinkedIn and 4,000+ newsletter subs.

He knows how to promote podcasts.

He did 40 interviews for his Covid-era podcast “Advertising Stories”. He produced and hosted his first marketing agency podcast in 2006.

Potential Interview Topics. Really, Just Name it.

Peter can talk about today’s challenged agency world, inbound and account-based marketing, and sales; marketing agency management; buying and selling agencies (he did this 3 times); personal branding (underutilized); and digital entrepreneurship. He has written three books and two photography books on the early-stage cannabis industry – Jointlandia and Potlandia.

He also has a zillion funny and instructive stories.

Peter is a native New Yorker, has lived in eight cities and now lives as a digital nomad in San Miguel de Allende, which is considered Mexico’s coolest town.

Logical Links.

Website: https://peterlevitan.com/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterlevitan/

“Kick-Ass” book landing page.

Photography: https://peterlevitanphotography.com/

Want to talk or need more info on podcasting or how to write your own Podcast Guest Proposal? Give moi a shout. peter@peterlevitan.com

6 Unignorable Advertising Quotes

Peter · December 4, 2023 · Leave a Comment

Why Do People Like Advertising Quotes? Who knows. Here Are 7 (not 6) Just For Y’all.

advertising quotesActually, I do know cause I use these unignorable advertising quotes all the time with my agency clients to make some points. My points are directed at their business development programs and even their personal brands. Feel free to steal them from me. I stole them.

“If everything seems under control, you’re just not going fast enough.”

Mario Andretti

My take: It is OK to drive past your comfort zone. In fact, you won’t win without doing it. Oh, who is Mario? Indy, F1, and NASCAR champ.

“If you don’t like what’s being said, change the conversation.”

Don Draper

My take: I occasionally have to remind myself not to go around and around and around. Yes, change the conversation. Or, add some new thinking.

“If you dislike change, you’re going to dislike irrelevance even more.”

General Eric Shinseki

My take: Advertising, PR, digital and mobile marketing is changing so fast that it makes me think of another go-fast quote.

“Lead, follow or get out of the way.”

Ted Turner

You do not need me to explain. Ted has been the man since the late 70’s when he won the America’s Cup. You know, fast boats. Launched CNN and married Jane Fonda. Not bad, huh?

“The world’s best selling book.”

This is from the front and back of Paul Arden’s rather best-selling book… “Whatever You Think Think The Opposite.” Of course, he is bullshitting. Or not. Paul was one of the great British Creative Directors which means, a great bullshitter. A winning bullshitter unless he is talking about whacking baby seals. As in the worst advertising agency presentation ever. 

“Steal Like An Artist.”

Another book. This time from Austin Kleon who’s book cover says… “10 things nobody told you about being creative.”

OK, One More.

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

My book’s title. Yes, I am a bit cheeky…. well, I stole the idea of being way bold and in your face from Paul. If you want to buy this BEST SELLING book, just go to the top of this page and see for yourself.

You Got A Quote?

Go forth and find your own advertising quotes to prove your points and to grow your agency. Sometimes you just need to steal someone else’s words to get YOUR point across.

The Idiocy Of Ad Agency Christmas Giving

Peter · December 2, 2023 · 4 Comments

Yes, Most Ad Agency Christmas Giving Is Ineffectual

OK. It’s 2023 and what a wonderful year it has been. yMucho agency leaders are thinking… huh, shouldn’t we do something cool for our clients? Like, deliver a bit of ad agency Christmas giving. But, um, no, do not do that. So in honor of my magical anti-gifting thought and advice, I offer MY annual Christmas gift rant (or better yet, a strategic approach to giving).

It is that time of year again.

It is the time that many an ad agency decides that it is a great time of year to add to the upcoming ad agency (and universal) Christmas giving clutter. OY – Am I being Grinch-like? You bet.

Does your ad agency send out Christmas cards or gifts or online trinkets (or other creative ideas) to clients — even prospects? I call this practice stupid silly. Strong words? Sure. but, why am I saying this?

Look, I have nothing against season’s greetings. But, after working at a couple of mega agencies (including my own) and watching dozens/hundreds of agencies send out very “creative” Christmas (Chanukah, Kwanza, etc.) cards and gifts during the late-December season, I have to say this is very ill-timed even highly-inefficient outreach.

Silly gifting is wasteful in three critical ways: [Read more…] about The Idiocy Of Ad Agency Christmas Giving

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