Ad agencies wish they were taken more seriously by the clients as business building partners. They feel they should have relationships higher up in the organisation and are frustrated with dealing with the lower levels of marketing management; only executing briefs as opposed to solving problems.
However - there's a whole lot of questioning going on in the client world that impacts this wish.
In these challenging times, we know that Marketing Directors (CMO's in US terms) are under massive pressure. But there's a deeper issue: in a recent multi-national survey done by Fournaise business consultants they found that 73% of CEO's think CMO's lack business credibility.
However, in another recent discussion that CMO.com had with top CEO's, they want CMO's to have a 'seat at the top table'.
So what's going on here?
Overall, there needs to be a marketing exercise for marketing, as a business builder, not the 'girls down the passage, who organise golf days and t-shirts'.
It's a recommitment to the solid principles of knowing what the customer wants and giving it to him/her in a way that no-one else can.
In some of my executive training, I challenge agencies to get more involved with their clients on issues like product concept innovation, to help the marketer innovate to grow their business. The general response? The marketer they deal with isn't even involved with that. It's done by "product" or "segement" - distant silo's in the business. They too are only 'implementers'. When agencies ask if they can meet the originators of the brief and raise the business discussion a notch or two, the answer is often no - people are protecting their turf rather than doing better business.
Agencies and their Client partners should make a combined effort to raise marketing's profile in the organisation, to get that seat at the top table. Agencies also need to embrace measurement and ROI - to talk in language that the CEO wants to hear.
Kimberly-Clark CMO Tony Palmer talks about 'pain points' in an insightful article in AdAge, about agency-client partnerships. One of the points he makes is that agencies and marketers have not found a meaningful way to use measurement to elevate and empower creativity and commercial ideas".
That way, it remains 'arty' and 'fluffy', as per the Fournaise study, and there's no seat at the top table for that.
Most important division in an organization is MARKETING. Cordial co-ordination will yield good results.
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