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What clients want and needAgencies need to start delivering on what clients want and need, in order to survive the current crisis that they are experiencing. ![]() "The individuals that have the greatest ability to survive are those that can adapt to the changing conditions of their environment," reflected Charles Darwin. This quote has never been more relevant to the advertising industry than now. There is no doubt that the advertising industry is going through flux and, some might even say, a crisis. Agency creative workloads are growing, but client fees are in decline. Some clients have supplanted agencies in providing leadership for brand strategies, media choices and production. Multinational agencies stretch their resources and downsize to generate holding company profit margins. Traditional agencies struggle to prove that they have digital and social capabilities. Agency difficulties are great, but the ad industry is neither the first nor last industry to face a crisis. Over the last three years, I have conducted Radar surveys consistently for close to 40 agencies and literally hundreds of clients. These agencies span every discipline: the so-called 'traditional', digital, media, PR, strategic consultancies, multinational and independent. And the themes are consistent. They never change and only vary according to the degree the specific agencies are delivering. Some are doing an outstanding job, others are good, some are satisfactory and then there are those who are not. What is interesting is that these trends are not unique to South Africa. They are universal. They are also not rocket science or new. The ones I touch on are not in any order of importance and are but a few of many:
Jakeman urged marketers to create digital cultures, not digital departments. "We 'ghettoize' digital as though it's the life raft tethered to the big ocean liner. And we have to move on from that." While the SA market remains more reliant on traditional media than developed markets, we need to accelerate our culture of digital marketing. Many South African clients are urging their agencies to look beyond traditional communications. While this is not a generalisation of the industry, it is not happening enough. To quote George Bernard Shaw: "The only man I know who behaves sensibly is my tailor. He takes my measurements anew each time he sees me. The rest go on with their old measurements and expect me to fit them." About Ann NurockAnn is a Partner at Relationship Audits and Management, a global consultancy that measures and optimises client /agency relationships. Her proprietary Radar tool is used by 30 corporates globally and as a result, she interacts with over 200 agencies of all disciplines. In addition to Radar, Ann attends the Cannes Lion Festival of Creativity on behalf of the SA Creative Circle and Bizcommunity and presents the trends to all sectors of business
Contact details: Ann.nurock@relationshipaudits.com;
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