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DRAFTFCBlog - Thoughts, Insights and Opinions on the Ad Industry > Posts > Is "Agency" a bad word?  

 
Is "Agency" a bad word?
Posted by Steve Schildwachter, SVP, Group Management Director, Draftfcb Chicago
 
There was a nice roundup in a recent New York Times article on the various agency start-ups in the Big Apple these days.

Wait. Did I say "agency"? That might have been a bad word.

The article quotes NY adman Brett Shevack as saying: "What's important is to lose the mentality of 'agency of record' and adopt the mentality of 'catalyst of record'." The article helpfully clarifies that this means "serve marketers as a force for change rather than as a supplier of the status quo".

Here we see the pervasive stereotype of today's ad agencies as backward, traditional, almost Luddite institutions, robotically producing 30-second TV commercials. (Sadly, there are some people and places in the industry where this stereotype is true.)

The word "agency" seems to be out of fashion. Last year a university professor told a large conference that the word "agency" means "the state of serving as an official and authorized delegate or agent". He helpfully clarified that "all agencies did was place the media for a commission and then provide the creative for free." This is factual, but incomplete.

If you check this definition of the word "agency,"  you will see not only the professor's definition but this one: "a business that serves other businesses". I like this definition better because it applies to agency models old, new and evolving.

To live up to this particular definition -- and Shevack's "catalyst of record" -- an agency of any model must learn the client's business, identify the consumer insight, set a clear business objective, and then help the client achieve it with strong creative in a channel-neutral plan.

If we all do that, "agency" will be a good word again.


Comments

Ben

Is advertising really in such a sad state that all this wordplay is necessary? There will always be bad and good agencies.
at 11/12/2009 12:53 AM

Steve Schildwachter

Dear Ben:  The point of my post is that the wordplay is absolutely unnecessary and we should focus on helping our clients succeed.  Results matter, not terminology.  Still, we should be cognizant of the various agency business models being created, tested, discarded and adopted.  This business will change.  Advertising is not in a sad state, but a quickly evolving one.
at 11/12/2009 10:00 AM

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