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New Improved Advertising Agency Search Process: ANA / 4A’s

Peter · October 31, 2013 · Leave a Comment

Advertising Agency Pitching. Oh, The Uncertainty. 

Unfortunately, most client agency reviews come with a great deal of uncertainty. They shouldn’t, but that’s the way it is — or should it be?

The 4A’s and the ANA understand this issue and recently published a new set of guidelines for the advertising agency search process in their report “Agency Selection Briefing Guidance.”  From the ANA/4A’s:

The 4A’s and ANA believe there is an opportunity to further improve the agency search process by developing best practice guidance tools around the subject of briefings throughout the agency selection process.

And…

The ANA/4A’s task force believes that every phase of a review, or agency search, requires a thoughtful briefing that
provides specific direction to the agency. The review process should provide escalating information to the agencies as
the review progresses from the initial phases (e.g., RFI, RFP, credentials) to the later phases (including any strategic
and/or speculative work and finals presentations).

The report divides the search process into three phases.

  1. Initial list / RFI Phase
  2. Semi-Finalist RFP Phase
  3. Finalist Phase

This is an important tool that both agencies and clients should read and use for guidance. I think that when you are asked to pitch a new client that you share this document. While it might seem forward and somewhat pedantic of you, I’ll suggest that making the prospect aware of this ANA perspective will be proof of your professionalism and might even help the client tailor their process for success. And, hopefully, yours.

2 New Levitan Guest Posts on Agency Post and Advertising Week

Peter · October 30, 2013 · Leave a Comment

I am keeping up my guest posting on authoritative advertising websites to get my thought-leadership out and build my website’s authority and page rank. Just in case you don’t know what these important SEO terms are, here are definitions:

Authority from Search Engine Land: Is your site an authority? Is it a widely recognized leader in its field, area, business or in some other way? That’s the goal. No one knows exactly how search engines calculate authority and, in fact, there are probably multiple “authority” signals. The type of links your site receives (lots of quality or ‘neighborhood’ links?) or social references (from respected accounts?) and engagement metrics (long clicks?) may all play a role in site authority.

Page Rank from Search Engine Land and Google: PageRank relies on the uniquely democratic nature of the web by using its vast link structure as an indicator of an individual page’s value. In essence, Google interprets a link from page A to page B as a vote, by page A, for page B. But, Google looks at considerably more than the sheer volume of votes, or links a page receives; for example, it also analyzes the page that casts the vote. Votes cast by pages that are themselves “important” weigh more heavily and help to make other pages “important.”Using these and other factors, Google provides its views on pages’ relative importance.

This Week’s Guest Posts

On Advertising Week Social Club — “Advertising Account Executives On The Frontline”

Intro: “I think that advertising agencies have to think hard about how they deliver value. It is often more about intangibles than the actual “work.” A great deal of our value resides in the Account Executive role and the client relationship. We know this because poor “account service” is often listed as the primary reason that a client has decided to switch agencies.”

On Agency Post — “eatbigfish Challenges The Limits.” FYI: eatbigfish is the leading “challerger brand” advertising agency.

Intro: “Aside from the agency name, most advertising, digital, branding and strategic consultancy websites are interchangeable. However, eatbigfish’s isn’t. It’s a marketing and business development juggernaut. Shouldn’t that be the point? “

Does your Agency Guest Post?

No? Send me an email and lets schedule a conversation about how you can amp up your social media marketing program so you get  more incoming leads – I mean lots more. Believe me smart, dedicated advertising agency social media tied to intelligent, action-oriented SEO works… I’ve got advertising agency clients on three continents from my SEO programs.

 

Ad Agency… Should You Use Facebook?

Peter · October 29, 2013 · Leave a Comment

Should ad agencies be using Facebook in their client’s online media program? Not according to a scathing new Forrester report. Read Forrester’s open letter to Mark Zuckerberg.

A graphics fan? Here is the most damning chart…

Forrester Report Says  Don’t Dedicate A Paid Ad Budget For Facebook    Business Insider

 

And, for a distillation of the Forrester report, here is Business Insider’s take.

I’ll digest the report just like you.

Should Your Agency Be Using Facebook As A business development Tool?

I have been amazed by the amount of time and energy that advertising agencies spend on their Facebook marketing. I mean, really, do you think that Facebook marketing is actually going to drive ad agency business development efforts? When was the last time you “liked” another agency’s Facebook page? Do you think that your future clients are hanging out on your Facebook page? Really?

Need some help with your agency’s social media program? This guy can help.

Attention, Interest, Decision, Action

Peter · October 18, 2013 · 1 Comment

The savvy Rebecca Armstrong, Principle and Managing Director of Portland’s ad agency North, recently wrote the following to me about her perspective on new business. About creating a holistic approach. About creating the total package. About the realization that it takes a plan. I agree.

New business for me is a very holistic package of having an excellent creative and strategic reputation, having a strong, singular and differentiating POV, having vocal advocates in your existing client base, having kick-ass PR counsel, growing a culture of new business in the organization, chasing culturally-aligned clients yadda yadda. And then there’s the pitch, which is an art in itself.

It also requires…

alec-baldwin-glengarry-glen-rossAttention, Interest, Decision, Action

As Alec Baldwin said, “ABC. Always be closing.” Its called sales pressure. This may sound a bit intense. But, isn’t employing some form of ABC, maybe your own way of ABCing it, what it all comes down to? In the case of advertising agencies, I suggest keeping the new business machine working 24/7. Something we can do given our digital and social tools.

Full disclosure: I am not advocating a full-on old-fashioned way of doing that thing that puts fear into the hearts of advertising agencies — SALES. I am simply pointing out, by showing you one of your favorite movie scenes, that only employing passive business development efforts won’t work. You will need to find your own special sweet spot between doing nothing, building that holistic program and acting like Alec Baldwin.

So… for some of my very own ABC, think David Mamet or, in my case, Mario Puzo. Just call me. Think Corleone.

Adobe Helps With Ad Agency New Business

Peter · October 8, 2013 · Leave a Comment

Adobe recently released the important insight-rich study, “Digital Distress: What Keeps Marketers Up At Night”,  on how marketers view digital marketing. I urge you to read the PDF of the full report: adobe-digital-distress-survey.

The good news for advertising agencies is that clients are not getting their 7 to 8 hours of REM a night. Tired means that you have significant pain points to aim at with your new business strategy.

Here is Adobe’s sleepless in marketing chart. It is rich with business development messaging points for agencies. The chart shows the gap between what marketers view as important vs. their level of satisfaction.

The first agency-related finding that jumps out to me is the gap between desire and fulfillment in marketing Creativity and Innovation. Hello, agencies, this is your sweet spot. But, you know that. In fact, there is so much fuel here that any agency could jump on just any one of these points (that means develop some relevant focused insights) to make a compelling case to get a meeting. Use some of my free insight tools to make that case.

what keeps marketers up at night

 

If you have a couple of minutes, check out Adobe’s animated infographic. It could be something to share with current or prospective clients.

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