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Ad Agencies, Please Watch This Video On Brand Positioning

Peter · March 29, 2013 · Leave a Comment

Here is the point on agency positioning I make in my white paper “The 22 Most Valuable Lessons I learned While Running An Advertising Agency“:

Create an ad agency brand positioning that differentiates your agency from your competition.

Right, you’ve heard this one before. More importantly, have a true brand positioning – it’s really a sales proposition — that actively attracts and stimulates interest from the right new clients. This is the important part:

Just trying to find yet another new way to say “digital” or “full-service” agency isn’t good enough – and it’s 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 agency of the future scenarios and new business models that will more effectively get you to that truly distinctive and compelling sales proposition.

It’s a rather important point. But, the crazy bit is that virtually every advertising agency knows this but can’t actually squeak out a truly distinctive positioning. I couldn’t make this point any better than this funny / scary video abut the agency Schlock & Ho. I seem to stumble upon once year but can’t figure out who did it. Do you know?

***

Hello: Agency CEO’s or wannabe CEO’s take me up on my Corleone Offer if you want to grow your agency.

 

I Was Fired – A Lot – A ‘Happy Ending’ Story

Peter · February 12, 2026 ·

New York Times Cover

 

“You’re… Fired”: My Life Story

I was fired five times. Five. Good news, each “you’re fired” led to personal success.

Before I get into my personal story, I want to make it clear that my definition of being fired is not necessarily the usual one. Traditionally, being fired means that you’ve been axed, sacked, canned, let go, terminated, or dismissed. In most cases, people get fired for poor performance, misconduct, breaking company rules, or other issues related to their work or behavior (plus the lovely phrase: downsized often due to a corporate reorganization).

To be very au current, given today’s evolving work universe, someone might have been AI’d. To be more direct, let’s just call it what it is… many careers are about to be brutally fucked by Artificial Intelligence. Not yet rampant. Stay tuned, as some bigly disruption is coming fast.

My firings were never due to poor performance (well, my Adidas case might be an exception). Stay tuned for that intriguing story.

Firing has gone in two directions. In my management career, I unfortunately had to fire people. In every case, letting someone go was extremely painful and upsetting for everyone involved.

Because the act was so painful for me, I have been fascinated (and repulsed) that the term “You’re fired” became part of our vernacular and was even applauded by fans of Donald Trump’s TV show The Apprentice.

This humiliating public dismissal became a bedrock vibe that helped elevate Trump’s popularity and belief in his business acumen. It proved to the unwashed just what a great businessman he has been. Americans have an interesting take on what makes a boss great. They also seem to love Trump’s use of gold…. Everywhere.

1. Fired Number One: Northwest.

I started my advertising career in 1980 at Dancer Fitzgerald Sample, New York’s largest advertising agency. We had multiple floors in the iconic Chrysler Building. DFS’s clients included major brands like Toyota, P&G, General Mills, RJR Nabisco, HP, and Wendy’s.

Not a bad place to launch a career. The 1980s advertising world rocked. My own clients included General Mills (cereals and Yoplait Yogurt), Sara Lee, and Western Union (yes, Western Union, its EasyLink service, get this, was the first commercial email app). Since the term email had yet to exist, as brilliant marketers, we called the benefit “Instant Mail.”

In my third year at DFS, I was asked to run the Minneapolis-based Northwest Airlines account. At the time, the third largest U.S. airline. Not just run the account; I was asked to move to Minneapolis and become the GM of our new office dedicated to this $60,000,000 advertising account. It was a rather good career move as it allowed me to move past my tier of account execs.

DFS inherited the business because our client, Republic Airlines, had been purchased by Northwest, and, well, good news, Northwest liked our style vs. Republic’s existing advertising agency.

Northwest bought Republic to build out its domestic routes. At that time, Northwest, then known as Northwest Orient Airways, was best known for its international service, particularly its leadership in North America-Asia routes. The airline’s “Great Circle Route,” developed in the 1930s, carried more flights to Asia than any other airline.

Back in the 1980s, Northwest was not considered a quality product. The planes were old. The seats were worn. The in-flight service kinda sucked.

To get ahead of the airline’s service failures, we brought in innovative marketing. We launched the most lucrative frequent flier program. We gave away more miles and therefore trips than any other airline. The airline’s largess worked at a time when domestic and global business travel was starting to boom. Good timing.

On the positive side, Northwest was the U.S. to Asia leader in terms of the number of westbound flights. The airline flew to China, Guam, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, and Thailand. Unfortunately, the international product was uncompetitive and increasingly at risk due to superior service from leading Asian carriers. Northwest was like a Volkswagen compared to a Ferrari. The airline’s dominance was also at risk from United Airlines, which was introducing new Asia routes.

To save the international business, we turned to what I called ‘information as a service’. An uncommon brand attribute in the 1980s.

Our Asia Series was designed to help newbie American businesspeople learn how to conduct business across unfamiliar Asian cultures. Examples: we taught Americans how and when to bow in Japan, how to deliver the right gifts in China, and how to survive a karaoke night in Seoul. These business tips were delivered via a series of TV commercials, 90-second radio infomercials, booklets, and even 900 numbers (yes, those were mostly porn in those days).

The Asia Series was so successful that we won a bunch of creative accolades and prestigious EFFIE Awards for the client and agency. EFFIEs were awarded by the American Marketing Association in recognition of marketing excellence and proven results.

Back to getting fired. [Read more…] about I Was Fired – A Lot – A ‘Happy Ending’ Story

The Advertising Agency Client. How Do They Find You?

Peter · October 26, 2024 ·

What Type of Advertising Agency Client Do You Want?

Advertising Agency ClientYour next advertising agency client probably has multiple needs, even if they think all they need is an Instagram influencer program or seriously good video storytelling.

Yes – It’s often difficult for a client to clearly state their needs / business objectives.

Objectives range from increasing sales and revenues, growing brand awareness, building loyalty, new product development, geo expansion to more Xandr please. Just to name a few. I’ve seen an inability to express clear objectives across client seniority. I once had a senior Nike client who didn’t have clearly stated sales goals. I know, kinda crazy. Instead of asking for those metrics, I asked my client how she made her bonus. There were interesting revelations in that discussion, including finding out where the agency could act to help make her a Nike star.

Let’s look at industry research on advertising agency client selection criteria.

The UK firm SCOPEN interviewed 81 senior marketing professionals, 57 chief marketing officers, and 56 agency professionals.

The overwhelming majority of respondents (72.8%) were the ultimate spending decision-makers. The research showed that creativity is the number one criterion used in agency selection.

However, SCOPEN also reported,

It’s interesting to see how (clients) are talking more about innovation related with business transformation and digital transformation, which is a different territory from creativity,

I’ll parse this out. Here is SCOPEN’s list of large client needs.

1. Creativity

2. Innovative ideas (how W+K got that first piece of Ford)

3. Digital capabilities

4. Strategic planning

5. Marketplace insights

6. Competitor insights

7. Brand knowledge

8. Trend awareness and predictions

9. Media planning

10. Social media prowess

11. Integrated services

12. Good value

That’s a long list. Not all clients need all of that. To simplify, I believe that most clients are looking for advertising experts. Be the expert who delivers smart, efficient programs plus measurable results. High ROI results.

OK. A podcast about client selection.

Thank You, Google’s NotebookLM, For This Episode.

Some insights from my book, “How To Build A Kick-Ass Advertising Agency,” on how to position, describe, and sell your advertising agency services.

That’s the story. Go forth and position your advertising agency for success.

How To Build An Active Website Contact Page

Peter · August 29, 2024 · 9 Comments

How Powerful Is Your Website’s Contact Page?

advertising agency contactI’m updating a 2023 blog post about the good, bad and ugly of advertising agency Contact pages. I’m into this today because I am helping a California agency build a kick-ass (action-oriented) website that sells.

In my journey, I came across the contact page for the “cool” agency Animal. YIKES! They have a contact page without any way to make a fast contact. WHA! Take a look. Their Contact page is the same as their home page sans any contact method other than giving you links to their social media. Two steps are one too many.

OK, To You

You’ve built your advertising or marketing or digital agency. You work on your client’s business. You want more clients. You have a website you hope your lead generation programs drive people to.

Then people go to the website and you hope they get so interested (and in some cases excited) that they go to your contact page and… you sound so lame and passive. Like you say virtually nothing that would make them really want to make contact. Harsh? Yup. True for the majority of advertising / digital agency websites (and, hey, the marketing world in general).

Here are some examples of what NYC and Cleveland agencies say on their Contact page. Would these “words” make you want to make contact?

  • To send our team a message, please use the form below.
  • Contact us using the form below and one of our team members will reach out as soon as possible.
  • Get in touch.
  • We’d love to hear from you and show you more of our work!
  • Just fill out the form and one of us will get back to you as soon as possible.
  • If you want to reach out to us, feel free to do so by email:

    These Contact Page “Words” Are So Freakin Passive… Being Passive Sucks

    Driving contact from the website visitor is where the rubber meets the road – isn’t this the reason y’all have a website?

    My tour of agency websites shows a wide range of contact pages. Most are too weak. Some (most) just provide an email contact. Some contact pages go for it by providing reasons to make contact. These contact pages are much more assertive than just having a passive contact email form.

    I am a strong believer that the contact section should be warm and welcoming. Businesslike but friendly. Contact should be an invitation and a metaphorical fist bump.

    Bland does not work for me. I need some online hospitality. This is a place to show some personality. Even humor. Even empathy. Try to get past the passive voice. Ask for the order. Gently. Not too Glengarry Glenn Ross.

    A quick idea (if you don’t want to read more)… Instead of bland text, why not deliver a 20-second video on why the visitor should talk with you?

    An Active Contact Page Drives Action

    Given people’s general inertia, go ahead and tell the visitor to make contact. Consider how to give them a good reason to act. Maybe make an offer to capture attention and a reaction. This isn’t a brand-new idea—SaaS companies do this all the time because it works.

    Here is what I say on my Contact page:

    Three reasons to contact me. I deliver the most creative approach to an advertising agency’s positioning and lead generation.I am the most experienced agency business development coach. Read the “My Story” page. I stole the idea from Austin Kleon. My goal is to make your advertising agency unignorable. Unignorable drives awareness and action. Think of the alternative.

    ++ I deliver an offer…

    Take me up on my free Corleone Godfather offer. This is an offer you can’t—or rather, shouldn’t—refuse. Let’s talk for thirty minutes—just 0.50 on the timesheet—to discuss your agency’s issues and opportunities and how I will help you build a more powerful advertising agency business development plan.

    Does my Godfather offer work? Yes.

    Does my Gandhi testimonial video at the bottom of the contact page help? Yup, I got Gandhi to give me that fist bump.

    Chicago’s Orbit Media website development firm goes a bit further than most agencies. They address the fact that the client might not be immediately ready for them. They have this interactive dialogue-building offer on the Contact page – it keeps the “conversation” going:

    Work with Orbit Ready to start a project? Fill out the form and Chris or Stephanie, our Web Strategists, will be in touch with you as soon as possible.Have a project but not quite ready to contact us? See if Orbit is a fit for you.

    Last BIG Point.

    Do not ask for too much personal information. You do not need the prospect’s date of birth.

[Read more…] about How To Build An Active Website Contact Page

Do Future Clients Ignore Your Advertising Agency

Peter · August 14, 2024 · Leave a Comment

How To Make Your Advertising Agency Unignorable

Lise Colantuono, President of AAR Partners, the leading advertising agency search firm, asked me to help you become a top-of-mind advertising agency. Oh, here is a list of the leading agency/client search firms. Do they know you?

https://peterlevitan.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/The-Unignorable-Agency-Stand-Out-and-Drive-Interest.mp4
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