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Search Results for: pitch

Let’s not start at “no thanks.” I really can help. I know it.

How? Let me start with a quick story.

saatchis-sq

My office at Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising’s London HQ belonged to Maurice Saatchi before he and Charles moved to more palatial digs across town. I’ve got to admit: sitting in what was once the epicenter of Saatchi’s global empire was pretty damn inspiring. One day, ECD Jeremy Sinclair, Maurice and I were sitting in my office working on a pitch. Suddenly, Maurice stopped talking, looked around, turned to Jeremy and said, “Boy, we made a lot of bad decisions in this office.”

Maurice’s honesty was a revelation. Building a major agency, even one as successful as Saatchi, wasn’t without its mistakes.

Growing your agency probably isn’t a slam-dunk either. You may need a major course correction. Or you may need a few intelligent tweaks to your business development plan. In either case, I can help you make the right decisions to move your agency forward, upward and onward. And, really, isn’t that what it’s all about?

So, before you bail out. Why not talk?

A Corleone offer.

corleone-sq

Let me make you an offer you can’t—or rather, shouldn’t—refuse.

Let’s meet for fifteen minutes—just 0.25 on the timesheet— to discuss how I could help you plan for growth. Think of me as a catalyst or a consigliore.

Best case: You’ll realize I can help you take your business to the next stage. Worst case: You walk away with at least one business-building insight.

It’s an offer that even the Don would admire.

LET’S TALK:

1-541-419-2309 (Pacific Time Zone)

Email: peter@peterlevitan.com

Skype: peterlevitan2

Twitter: @peterlevitan

LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/peterlevitan

Like hard copy? Here is a handy and informative Fact Sheet.

Advertising Agency New Business: Instagram

Peter · February 15, 2013 · 1 Comment

My earlier post, “From Traditional To Digital To Integrated To Social To Instagram”, on the advertising blog AdPulp took a look at the New York agency The Mobile Media Lab. As I noted in the post, this agency describes themselves as… “The Mobile Media Lab is a creative agency that produces customized visual experiences with brands and their audiences on Instagram and other social media channels.”

Here is an agency that isn’t worried about finding a niche and owning it. They are not trying to be everything to everybody. Their visual marketing specialty has netted them some famous clients including Evian, Puma, Samsung and W Hotels. Accounts most agencies would love to have. Accounts that a “full-service” Boston agency might have some trouble winning.

Clearly, Mobile Media Lab successfully tapped into a growing marketing area where big-name clients want expertise.

instagram

When I’ve discussed the visual marketing specialty with agency colleagues, they expressed concerns about The Mobile Media Lab’s narrow focus and limitation of tools like Instagram. I have a different perspective. Yes, visual marketing is a tightly focused approach. But, the use of Instagram and Pinterest is skyrocketing and why couldn’t even a large “full-service” agency build a micro-group around niche visual marketing to get new business interest? Just like The Mobile Media lab, another agency just might get the attention of brands that would have never given them a look. Visual marketing is something that can be pitched and should generate interest from sophisticated clients.

Is there any reason that you couldn’t take a niche play to quickly become an expert in a new marketing category? Advertising agency niche markting could be your ticket into the national marketing arena. I’ll soon write about some of the other niches that can be exploited.

1,247th Blog Post On Advertising Agency Social Media

Peter · February 13, 2013 · 5 Comments

There are over 177,000,000 results for the search phrase “advertising agency social media” on Google. There are now whole industries based on social media advice. So, in the interest of piling on… I’m about to add one more blog post on social media and advertising.

But, before I start, lets make sure we agree on what social media is. Here is a concise definition from Dictionary.com that includes the critical object of increasing sales.

Web sites and other online means of communication that are used by large groups of people to share information and to develop social and professional contacts: Many businesses are utilizing social media to generate sales.

Just in case you are still wavering about how much effort to put into social media…

Here are 17 reasons that ad agencies should use social media as a new business tool.

  1. When managed systematically, the strategic use of social media will drive inbound attention for your agency.
  2. Social media will support your agency positioning and drive awareness of your thought-leadership.
  3. Social media is relatively easy to create and manage. If your mother can do it, you can do it too.
  4. Social media is easier to update than your agency website.
  5. There are lots of platforms to choose from: Twitter, blogs, Pinterest, Facebook, LinkedIn, G+, YouTube, Wikipedia and SlideShare. Each has unique strategic benefits and workload — choose carefully. More are coming.
  6. You will have a corporate LinkedIn page as another agency marketing platform. All of your employees will link to it.
  7. You will use social platforms for direct marketing. For example, you will use twitter’s “@” to directly contact client prospects.
  8. All social platforms, like your blog and Twitter, will be seamlessly linked together for efficiency and traffic generation.
  9. Social Media is integral to the agency SEO program. After only one month, my Pinterest advertising agency website directory is appearing on the first page of Google results.
  10. You will learn to use social media analytics to continuously improve your programs.
  11. You will stay up to date with the evolving state of mobile social media.
  12. Your strategic use of social media will help you look like an expert to your clients. You will walk the talk.
  13. Do social right and you will generate positive case histories based on your expertise. I’m building a case right now for my Pinterest strategy.
  14. You will use social to do agency and client research. Twitter remains an untapped resource for following news on perspective clients.
  15. You will use social media to better understand a potential client’s online audience and brand perception.
  16. Your social media expertise will make you will look smarter in pitches.
  17. You will undoubtedly use your social media expertise to create award-winning programs like Projector’s Facebook work for Intel.

All is not rosy. Here are 7 reasons not to use social media.

  1. Agency senior management does not really get it – at all.
  2. Your agency is not capable of making an adequate time and intellectual commitment to marketing via social media.
  3. You don’t have one or more people dedicated to owning the social program and its on-going success.
  4. You will be inconsistent. You really don’t want to be the agency with 4-month-old Tweets.
  5. You won’t make the effort to integrate your social media program into you agency marketing plan.
  6. You think that all you have to do is a little bit of social media and you’ll quickly get lots of incoming calls from prospective clients.
  7. You don’t have a distinctive agency positioning, message or voice to promote. Me-too messaging won’t make a dent in this space.
  8. You won’t stand out. Just take a look at how few advertising or digital agency blogs are on Ad Age’s Power 150 list of influential blogs.

So, what is my bottom line?

I’ve used social media since the 1990’s to grow companies (online newspapers) and website traffic (over 20 million users for my SmarterChild Instant Messaging bot.) However, like any effective new business tool, the use of social media must be strategic, linked to an expertise-based content strategy, be targeted and needs at least weekly oversight. Do this… and social media will work for you.

Give me a shout. I can help.

Advertising: Get Ahead Of Disruption… Or Else.

Peter · February 12, 2013 · 9 Comments

Advertising Service Disruption

screen-shot-2016-12-26-at-9-18-28-amI wrote this post in 2013. it is…. still relevant. If not more so.

“If you dislike change, you’re going to dislike irrelevance even more.” – General Eric Shinseki

In 1995 I moved from Saatchi & Saatchi Advertising Worldwide to launch New Jersey Online for Advance Publications. It was exciting to play a role in the burgeoning online news industry. It was also scary to know that the daily newspaper was about to be disrupted by the Internet. We had a sense of what was coming and created new online approaches to deliver the news, new advertising formats and new services including well-trafficked community forums which were a harbinger of the coming power of social media.

What most in the newspaper industry didn’t see coming until it was too late was Craig Newmark. Craigslist started as a San Francisco event email service in 1995, moved to Web based delivery in 1996 and then expanded into other categories. Craigslist began to rollout across the world in 2000.

Craigslist and other online classified sites like HotJobs, Monster, Realtor.com and Cars.com radically disrupted the newspaper industry’s multi-billion dollar golden goose – classified ad sales. Some of you might not remember the huge amount of newsprint devoted to auto, jobs, real estate and for-sale classifieds in the late 1990’s. But, just imagine that the classifieds sections alone were at least as thick as today’s current dailies. Newspapers derived much of their cash from small classified ads, not from Macy’s display ads.

The decline of newspaper revenues from the loss of classified sales and the move to other forms of digital advertising and news delivery has been dramatic. I’ve keep this image large for effect.

newspapers

Obviously newspapers are not the only business that’s being disrupted. Guess what, even Craigslist is getting hammered by newcomers.

Yikes!

big chart of disruption

(The chart might be clearer at Andrew Parker’s Gong Show.)

And, what about the advertising industry?

While I don’t think that the world of advertising agencies will experience the dramatic loss of industry relevance akin to newspapers (or travel agents), disruption is a daily occurrence that is affecting our bottom line. The billions spent via Google’s AdWords DIY services has to come from somewhere. That somewhere is the total pot of advertising dollars.

Even some analog businesses are disrupting the old advertising model. Talent agencies like CAA have morphed into marketing agencies with their CAA Marketing in-house agency winning a Cannes Grand Prix for their fantastic Chipotle TV commercial. But wait, there’s more. The barrage of disruption is growing daily.

  • Agencies that are not really “agencies”: Conde Nast Studios and Radical Media, “A global transmedia company that develops and produces television shows, films, commercials, brand identities, advertising concepts, digital content and event-based entertainment.”
  • DIY design: I keep seeing ads for 99 Designs. “The #1 marketplace for graphic design, including logo design, web design and other design contests. Over 150000 satisfied customers!”
  • DIY ads: Google AdWords, LinkedIn, Facebook and Spotrunner
  • Implementation: avVenta, “avVenta resources plug into existing marketing operations to help brands reduce operational costs by improving processes, global standards and outsourcing key responsibilities” and E-Graphics, “E-Graphics Worldwide blends global multichannel capabilities with in-house efficiencies, that adapts and extends your marketing message.”
  • Ideas: Ideascicle, “It’s expert sourcing. Not crowdsourcing” and Genius Rocket and their pitch…

GeniusRocket is what an ad agency looks like when it’s stripped of Madison Avenue skyscrapers, high-priced creatives on payroll, sushi dinners at Nobu, and two-week shoots at the Viceroy in Santa Monica.

Is it time for advertising agencies to roll over and die? No.

But you may need to change your stay-the-course mindset – and soon. For starters, ask yourself if using yesterday’s business model is hindering your growth. Maybe staying the course seems sane to you but living by past decisions and worrying about sunk costs could make you red meat for disruption. But, that’s not how the digital community plays…

“If you’re not doing something crazy, you’re doing the wrong things.”  – Google CEO Larry page

I recently read the results of a CIO Network task force on how major corporations deal with disruptive technology. The task force was co-chaired by CIO’s from Jet Blue, Nissan and Rio Tinto. These CIO’s offer some relevant advice to avoid irrelevance.

Here are a couple of their recommendations plus some of my thoughts and ideas related to the advertising industry.

1. CREATING A CULTURE

“CIOs should create a cultural appetite that accepts change, risks and failure, and understands that innovation can take time. Invite venture capitalists and entrepreneurs to talk to senior leadership and identify ways your business is going to be disrupted.”

My Plan:

 Accept and embrace the idea that change is good.

Take some of your agency time to do a SWOT analysis to identify and begin to address change-driven Threats and Weakness that could impede your agency’s future. In the world of disruptive technology, the future is next month not next  year.

Get out of the office and meet with start-ups and young, hungry technologists. Go to tech events. Trade your services and experience for start-up insights and   energy. Here is a blog post I wrote on AdPulp about the importance of getting out of the office. Religiously reading AdWeek in the comfort of your office will not grow your agency.

2. PARTITION DISRUPTION

“Name the disruption and then partition it as a separate business with separate financials, people and metrics.”

 My Plan:

Leverage the disruption by building a business around it. Think like a start-up. Is this a brand new idea? No. But, are you?

I had a chance in 2008 to be an early leader in the new Android applications market. It was a relatively low cost way to move my agency into mobile marketing. But, I seriously blew it.

When I learned that Google’s Android was going to launch an application SDK, I  asked our Digital CD to accelerate the creation of a new business unit by buying a related URL (like, www.androiddeveloper.com; it was early); build out a lean lead-generation website to highlight our expertise (as in fake it to start) and run some Google ads to gauge early market interest to see if we could generate  incoming leads. All of this was designed to make us look like we had our act    together while we were going out into the Portland mobile developer community  to find partners. Unfortunately, the CD didn’t share my need for speed and he dragged his feet until we missed the early-stage window of opportunity.

I learned three things.

  1. Starting a new division or operating unit on the back of  a disruptive technology is a good idea.
  2. Just do it. Be quick to prototype, test, iterate and launch especially if it can be a low-cost entry. When pundits say that agencies should act like start-ups this is what they mean.
  3. Hire the right people who share  your energy and bias for action. The wrong people could kill your future. The Digital CD left a couple of months later.

To see a company that actually lives and leverages disruption, take a look at New York’s The Mobile Media Lab. They embrace visual technologies like Instagram and Pinterest as brand new marketing services that are getting major client attention.

3. KEEP HEAD OUT OF SAND

“Identify and accept inevitabilities and work them into your strategy. Create an unassailable argument around the inevitable to gain acceptance in the organization.”

My Plan:

Create an innovation culture or maybe an innovation team. Benchmark companies like IDEO.

Help your people understand that without innovation you might have to close  your doors; they could lose their jobs and even careers.

Build a system for continually identifying disruptive and opportunistic  technologies and use scenario planning and estimated financials to help review             business opportunities. You don’t have to completely change your business model. Maybe all you need to do is add a new marketable service. Something     purple (as in Purple Cow.)

A last word. 

One of my favorite clients was Legalzoom.com. Legalzoom.com is in the business of disrupting the legal industry. Disruption is cool if you are the one doing it. I’ve used Legalzoom.com for my wills, advance directives, power of attorneys and LLC formation. They easily curtailed my use of lawyers and, like my experience in online news, heightened my understanding of the dramatic power of digital disruption.

To demonstrate my agency’s understanding of the idea of disruption in our Legalzoom pitch, we used a photoshopped picture of a large yacht sitting on a trailer in downtown LA. The For Sale sign read…  “Lawyer needs cash. Thank You Legalzoom.”

OK, one more last word.

I just did a search on me to see when I started to think hard about disruption. Here is a link to a 1996 AdAge article that included some of my thoughts on the subject: “Classifieds prove to be a goldmine for online outlets.”

Made In America: Made Movement: American Innovation At Work

Peter · September 17, 2012 · 1 Comment

This might be a bit off topic, but…

Made Movement is a Boulder “marketing agency” (built by guys from Crispin Porter) that has positioned themselves as being dedicated to, as they say: “We propel brands that make things in America with business-solving, needle-moving strategy and marketing.” I love that they’ve actually manged to find a business niche that delivers some resonance. Most agencies do not have a brand positioning that is remotely different from all their competitors despite the fact that this is what they say they do for their clients.”

They are also in the eCommerce business via their flash-sale site Made Collection. This site sells made in America goods – like shirts made by folks in the Oregon prison system. Made Movement is hoping to build on research that Americans think that goods made here are superior and also build on a bit of patriotism. The site is well-designed, easy-to-use and cool, its in that 2012 hipster style that’s ruling right now. It is an interesting proof-of-concept for the marketing agency pitch.

OK. Why am I blabbing about this? Made Movement has done a couple of the smart / idea / innovative / envelope pushing things that I think we all need / should / could / have to do… If we want to keep the brain juices flowing.  In their case, they are taking the very (very) moribund ad agency concept and are adding a very new twist, a way to position themselves differently and, via consumer insight, to deliver very fresh ideas.

Fresh is good. Being fresh is a good strategy. Works for all of us.

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