“When we treat our agencies as partners, we get great work. When we treat them as suppliers, we get crap work.” He heaped blame on procurement officers: “The single biggest complaint agencies have is that this relationship is managed by procurement. The problem is we are thinking of marketing as a cost rather than a value.”
Brad Jakeman, then president of the Global Beverage Group at PepsiCo, jumped in, noting that his company eliminated the procurement function earlier that year in order “to focus on marketing.” By moving procurement “out of a control function,” Michael Kassan would later say, PepsiCo had boldly relegated them “from first string violin to the orchestra.” Jakeman went on to express sympathy for beleaguered agencies: “They knew we respected that they had to makemoney. They’re a public company, like we are. They have margin commitments to hit, just like we do. They have revenue targets to hit, just like we do. And the only variable they have to play with to hit these margins is the quality of the people they put on your business. So if we pay them less, they’re going to put more junior people on the business. Probably not as talented people. And that’s going to show up in the quality of the work.”
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The agency reviews of 2015 engendered some bitter feelings. Maurice Levy of Publicis, as we’ve seen, was angry that Omnicom bested Publicis to snatch the P&G account from them, and he was ecstatic to pluck the Bank of America strategic planning business from WPP’s Martin Sorrell. Levy was on his game for that pitch, exuding Gallic charm, and in control of the message from the broad strokes down to a granular level. He promised that his respected chief strategist, Rishad Tobaccowala, would be directly involved with BofA in planning and executing its annual $2 billion marketing spend. By contrast, BofA executives grumble that they were offended by WPP’s performance: Martin Sorrell brought in a truckload of different CEOs, many of whom did not seem to know one another, and their presentation was disjointed. Bank executives felt Sorrell and Irwin Gotlieb lectured them. “Martin spoke for a half hour,” a senior executive says, “and Irwin for one hour. That only left a half hour for discussion.”
There was nothing new about nailing a pitch in an agency review, or blowing it, for that matter, but the wave of agency reviews that started post-Mandel’s 2015 speech felt different. For the first time ever to this degree, efforts were intensifying to discard the middleman. Increasingly, clients were taking work away from agencies to do it in-house. Procter & Gamble has created its own proprietary programmatic ad buying system, taking some—not all—of programmatic buying awayfrom its agencies. The ANA reported in 2016 that 31 percent of advertisers responding to one of their surveys said they had brought elements of programmatic ad buying in-house. Obstacles remain, particularly for smaller companies, because programmatic buying rewards scale, but for agencies the trends are ominous.
Even more worrisome, clients are also doing more creative work in-house. Unilever outsourced Unilever Studio to a company to perform tasks once outsourced to agencies. Airbnb CMO Jonathan Mildenhall, who left a top marketing job at Coca-Cola to join this digital upstart in 2014, says half his marketing department “are creative. They’re writers and art directors and photographers and videographers.” A major reason, he says, is that agencies don’t move fast enough. A client performing more of its own creative work was a practice he followed when he was at Coca-Cola, and it’s practiced at companies like Apple. It’s true as well in the world of fashion, where the designers’ vision is central, and where internal marketing departments are usually entrusted to create marketing campaigns.
More nimble public relations firms now commonly supplant ad agencies to tweet,
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