This post is by Darren Woolley, Founder of TrinityP3. With his background as analytical scientist and creative problem solver, Darren brings unique insights and learnings to the marketing process. He is considered a global thought leader on agency remuneration, search and selection and relationship optimisation.
The relationships between advertisers and their agencies are becoming more complicated and difficult to define. But when they work well this junction of creativity and commerce can have a significant impact on both parties.
But what are the key criteria or ingredients for high performing advertiser and agency relationships? What are the challenges in managing these relationships? What advice do you have in regards to managing the relationship? And what changes will these relationships need to face in the foreseeable future?
4 thoughts on advertiser / agency relationships starts here with Jetstar and their agency The Royals.
Jetstar: Peita Golden, Regional Manager Marketing and PR & Ingrid Nason, Group Marketing Manager, PR and Sponsorships
The Royals: Andrew Siwka, Director
The Royals:
Jetstar:
The Royals:
Great Clients understand and respect that Agencies need to be successful businesses, which means charging appropriately for their services and then their value is evaluated objectively against the results they deliver. Bad relationships see Agencies having margins unnecessarily squeezed leading to compromises on delivery, tension and prohibits added value initiatives – all of which make premature Agency turnover an inevitable outcome.
Jetstar:
Avoid frustration by sharing the problems or issues with the client to arrive at solutions together. The agency doesn’t need to arrive at this alone.
Also, managing retainers and extra costs and determining what’s reasonable and how you justify the return on the work up the line (generally to senior stakeholders that are not marketers)
The Royals:
Marketers need to invest serious time and effort in the relationship. (It is not just the Agency’s job). The exponential upside is worth it.
Jetstar:
Invest in briefing your agencies so that they buy into the whole business strategy and objectives. Don’t just be campaign focussed. Clients need to give as much detail and information possible to arrive at the best brief & outcome
The Royals:
There will be a requirement to genuinely work more collaboratively with all the Clients’ business/marketing partners. Natural selection will favour those that are capable of delivering in that sort of an environment.
Jetstar:
Clients are diversifying their needs so Agencies are going to need to work with more diverse units within the business and collaborate with other third parties / agencies. This can work if well managed by Clients and the expectations for each Agency are defined.
Agencies and Advertisers: If you have Four Thoughts to share on good agency / advertiser relationships please feel free to send me your responses from both the advertiser and the agency perspective and a photo to join the conversation.