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THE AGENCY NO BALL, NO PITCH: AD AGENCIES ARE ON SHAKY GROUND! By Marketing Africa Editorial Crew I t has been said before and we will say it again: if your business doesn’t control a critical component of its product, you are on borrowed time. You need an exit strategy, and fast. If you invested in one or run an Ad agency … be very wary! As Jack Welch, former CEO of GE once said, “Never compete where you don’t have a competitive advantage.” Few, if any of our ad agencies in East Africa got this memo. Viewed differently, the Ad agency business model is akin to this poor kid that lived in a wealthy neighborhood. While he was a great soccer talent, he could neither lay claim to the ball nor the pitch he played on. Each day of practice, started with a plea to his right-hand-side neighbor …”may I please borrow the ball?” Onward to the left-hand-side neighbor … “May I please play on your pitch?” It got worse when his feet were closely examined … back to this later!. But what does this story have to do with ad agencies? First, The Ball The ball symbolizes the brand. To do what it does best, the agency needs a client brand and to this end, it must get the client’s permission. Because the client can pack up and leave, the agency will forever be at pain to please the client. With successive annual pitches, this sets off a perpetual race down the price spiral. Bottom line is that the client has greater bargaining power than the agency. It follows that while the agency’s creative effort may drive super profits for a client, the agency barely gets to extract commensurate value from the relationship. The agency’s hope then lies in its ability to attract future clients. But it all boils down to the quality of the work done for the current and ‘‘ Where the agency favorably negotiates terms such as discounts, the client is never too far to claim the spoils. With the increasing influence of parent offices abroad, most clients now demand for full disclosure terms in agency contracts. Save for outright dishonesty or conveniently forgotten disclosure, the agency will never keep much of the value it generates from its relationship capital with media houses.’’ 44 MAL 17/17 ISSUE previous brands. You know matters are amiss when you hear the sad tale among agency execs of the great campaigns they could do for their clients, if only the latter would allow. Back to the ball. So one day, our poor kid in the rich neighborhood immensely looked forward to showing his great talent when the big league scouts were due in town. Alas, the rich neighbor who lent the ball would only allow him to kick it in two directions; forward and backward (never sideways, never diagonally). Not able to demonstrate a lot of skill under such limitations, his ability to impress the next scout was not entirely up to him. It then followed that his great talent guaranteed no future. Fate accompli! Second, The Pitch The pitch symbolizes media platforms. With a client campaign at hand, the agency’s next concern is placement. In comes the media houses. Barring the small radio stations and magazines, your typical mainstream media house is 5 times bigger than the agency, both in revenue and capitalization. Unlike the agency, they own the critical component that makes up their business, be it a newspaper, radio station or TV broadcasting license, complete with their own brand and loyal fans. The agency can do whatever it pleases