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Undergraduate senior thesis about digital agencies and their involvement in integrated marketing campaigns
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CHALLENGES FA
CED BY
DIGITA
L AGENCIE
S
IN C
REATIN
G INTE
GRATED M
ARKETING
CAMPAIG
NS FOR T
HEIR C
LIENTS
SE
NI O
R T
HE
SI S
BY
LI N
DS
AY
O’ H
AR
A
AGENDA
Introduction
Research questions
Literature review
Study 1 Method Results
Study 2 Method Results
Discussion
Limitations and future research
INTRODUCTION
What does the study focus on? Relationships between digital agencies and their clients as well as
client’s partner agencies How collaboration and communication between agencies most often
occurs
Why study this topic? Interest in how digital agencies are integrated into a client’s
overarching campaign Lack of current research on the relationship between agency partners
RESEARCH QUESTIONS
When and how do partner agencies working with the same client communicate and collaborate?
Do digital agencies feel satisfied with their role in working on client campaigns?
In which functional areas does most client influence occur?
In which functional areas does influence from client’s partner agencies occur?
Does agency size contribute to the differences between digital agencies and traditional agencies?
LITERAT
URE REVIE
W
Literature Review
INTEGRATED MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS IN THE DIGITAL AGE
IMC is “an audience-driven business process of strategically managing stakeholders, content, channels, and results of brand communication programs” (Kliatchko, 2008)
By creating a message that transcends multiple channels, the client can coordinate a synergy across all media elements that strengthens the effectiveness of the communication (Stammerjohan, 2005; Kliatchko, 2008)
Although a majority of agencies agree they use IMC approaches with their clients, only a quarter of those agencies rated their program’s quality highly (Liodice, 2008)
Lack of strategic consistency across communication disciplines and entrenched silos within marketing organizations and agency partners are barriers to successful IMC (Liodice, 2008)
Literature Review
DIGITAL VERSUS TRADITIONAL AGENCIES
Clients are beginning to place less importance on the type of agency handling their business and more on their creativity and quality of work (Parekh, 2008)
Another factor in comparing traditional to digital agencies is their size. In a 1997 study done by Schultz, he found that small agencies contributed more time developing integrated marketing communications with their clients than large agencies. Liz Ross, American President and Global CMO of Tribal DDB Worldwide, also stated “a lot of the old, bigger agencies are trapped in their old structures, so it’s really about who has the best talent” (Parekh, 2008)
Clark Kokich, CEO of Razorfish, was quoted in a 2008 article by Parekh stating, “ten years from now, all agencies will be digital agencies” (Parekh, 2008)
Literature Review
AGENCIES AND THEIR RELATIONSHIPS WITH CLIENTS
Client influence on their agency’s work may vary depending on the specific agency function (Waller, 2010)
Because agencies hold the expert power in creative work, the client should exert less influence on creative work than other functions such as marketing development. (Waller, 2010)
Literature Review
INTEGRATION BETWEEN A CLIENT’S PARTNER AGENCIES
While in the past, clients tended to keep strong barriers around individual agency disciplines, today they are coordinating agency functions through IMC and increasing communication effectiveness and consistency (Ewing, 2000)
Developing a clear brand strategy first and using it to drive each discipline’s work is important in creating effective IMC campaigns (Liodice, 2008)
The synergy created by IMC requires strong coordination among diverse agencies (Ewing, 2000)
STUDY
1
I NT
ER
VI E
WS
Study 1 Method
METHOD
Interviews, 20-25 minutes long
Questions focused on communication and relationships with client and their clients’ agency partners
Officers at digital agencies (names have been changed) Jacob, Chief Operating Officer, Digital Agency, ~40 clients Ethan, Partner, Digital Agency, ~130 clients Alex, Chief Marketing Officer, Digital Agency, ~50 clients Will, Chief Strategy Officer, Digital Agency, ~50 clients
Study 1 Results
COMMUNICATION BETWEEN AGENCIES IMPORTANT ON THE FRONT END
“Alignment around a creative idea that will drive execution across all different mediums” –Alex
Communication is “incredibly important early on” - Jacob
Study 1 Results
COLLABORATION WITH OTHER AGENCIES MAY DEPEND ON THE AGENCY’S FUNCTION
“Social media is one area where there is more collaboration because often the PR agency has a bigger place there” - Ethan
TV and Print have one deliverable, so collaboration occurs on the front end – Alex
Digital, PR and media work with a lot of moving parts, so collaboration is important throughout - Alex
Study 1 Results
DISAGREEMENT ON DEGREE OF SATISFACTION WITH THE ROLE DIGITAL AGENCIES PLAY IN A CLIENT’S OVERARCHING CAMPAIGN
“Increasingly so because clients are spending more of their time including their digital agencies in upfront planning” – Jacob
“As a motivated professional, there is always the ability to do more for the client and desire to do more for the client” – Ethan
The world is transforming dramatically, actually lead agency for some clients, taking more and more work – Alex
“Typically clients gear towards giving the work to the traditional agencies because they’ve always worked with them and they’ve already given them most of the budget to retain the staff, but my argument is that in this new world they just don’t get it. They’re not living, breathing, sleeping, loving the digital world, where we in the digital agency do.” - Will
Study 1 Results
CLIENTS SHOULD INFLUENCE THE BUSINESS OBJECTIVES (WHAT AND WHY) OF THE CAMPAIGN INSTEAD OF THE CREATIVE DEVELOPMENT (HOW)
“Typically try to focus questions on what they want to accomplish and why they want to accomplish it instead of how do they think it should be accomplished” - Ethan
“Know what they’re trying to accomplish, where you are delivering them what they ask for but giving them a new way to look at it” – Alex
“The thing you always try to come back with is getting to a good brief at the starting point” – Will
Study 1 Results
DIGITAL IS INCREASINGLY INTEGRATED INTO THE CENTRAL IDEA OF A CAMPAIGN, CAUSING NEED FOR COLLABORATION THROUGHOUT CAMPAIGN DEVELOPMENT
“Collaboration is really critical around the touch points” – Ethan “We need to have more collaboration than ever to get that
consistency” – Will
Study 1 Results
MUCH OF THE DIGITAL VS. TRADITIONAL AGENCY DEBATE MAY COME BACK TO SIZE OF THE AGENCY
“Less around digital vs. traditional, more about the size of the company. Smaller companies tend to be more innovative and larger companies tend to be more process-focused” – Jacob
“Digital agencies are often smaller, growing companies that are used to taking risks. They’re entrepreneurs, they’re people that have had to grow their business from scratch, and fight and push and sell and put the foot in the door if they can get more work, which leads to a cultural way of thinking.” – Will
Study 1 Results
DIGITAL AND TRADITIONAL AGENCIES MAY CONTINUE TO MERGE AND JUST BECOME “THE AGENCY”
“What 5 years from now is a ‘traditional agency’ will have pretty decent digital shops.” – Ethan
“Stop defining them that way, but just defining great work. Model in future holistic agencies aren’t defined by what they deliver, just great work” – Alex
Digital agencies are trying to get “better and better and [develop] the skills to approach being ‘the agency’” - Will
STUDY
2
SU
RV
EY
S
Study 2 Method
METHOD
Online survey, 5 minutes to complete
Questions developed based on Study 1’s interview results
Invited 86 agencies via email from Top 50 Digital Agencies (Advertising Age) Member list from Society of Digital Agencies
11 participants
Study 2 Results
RESPONDENT DEMOGRAPHICS
64%18%
9%
9%
NUMBER OF CLIENTS SERVED
1-20
21-40
41-60
61-100
101-150
150+
9%
18%
27%
45%
PERCENTAGE OF CLIENTS SERVED BY MORE THAN ONE
AGENCY
0-50%51-70%71-80%81-90%91-100%
Study 2 Results
RESPONDENT DEMOGRAPHICS
45%55%
PUBLIC VS. PRIVATE OWNERSHIP
PublicPrivate
27%
18%
9%
27%
9%9%
NET BILLINGS
Less than $10 million$10.1-20 million$20.1-40 million$40.1-80 million$80.1-150 million$150.1-300 millionMore than $300 mil-lion
Study 2 Results
CLIENT INFLUENCE ON DIGITAL AGENCY FUNCTIONS
0%
30%
60%
90%
N/ATotal influenceMajor influenceMinor influenceNo influence
Study 2 Results
AGENCY PARTNER INFLUENCE ON DIGITAL AGENCY FUNCTIONS
0%
30%
60%
90%
N/ATotal influenceMajor influenceMinor influenceNo influence
Study 2 Results
CLIENT VS. AGENCY PARTNER INFLUENCE
Clients may exert more influence (M=3.0) than agency partners (M=2.4) on brand and business strategy (T=1.348, p=.214)
Clients may exert more influence (M=2.6) than agency partners (M=2.0) on website and app development (T=1.964, p=.081)
Clients may exert more influence (M=2.4) than agency partners (M=1.9) on mobile strategy (T=2.236, p=.053)
Clients exert more influence (M=2.6) than agency partners (M=1.9) on search performance and optimization (T=2.333, p=.045)
Study 2 Results
STAGES IN COMMUNICATION PREVALENCE
Research
Strategy
Planning
Production
Implementation
Review and analysis
0% 10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Study 2 Results
STAGES IN COMMUNICATION PREVALENCELARGE VS. SMALL AGENCIES
The prevalence of communication during the production of a campaign may be dependent on an agency’s size (X2 = .2.933, p=.087).
Large agencies were more likely to view communication with agency partners as important during the production stage because 40% of large agencies ranked it as important compared to 0% of small agencies.
The prevalence of communication during review and analysis, implementation, planning, strategy, or research phase of a campaign is not dependent on an agency’s size.
Review & analysis (X2 = .749, p = .387) Implementation (X2 = .782, p = .376) Planning (X2 = .1.32, p = .251) Strategy (X2 = .02, p = .887) Research (X2 = .782, p = .376)
Study 2 Results
SATISFACTION WITH ROLE IN CLIENT’S IMC EFFORTS
Yes; 82%
No; 18%
“In our specific case, a lot of agency partners
are involved with equal voice and little
to no moderation from the leading agency. This leaves agency
teams pulling in different directions,
often times based on their core
competency.”
“Less opportunity to drive our own process and it
throws off our work as we retrofit our work and insights
to fit into other agency and client
timelines.”
DISCUSSION
Integration between client’s agency partners is important on the front end of an IMC campaign’s development
Mixed responses to digital agency’s overall satisfaction in the role the agencies play for their clients indicates controversy
Client influence is strongest when developing business and marketing objectives rather than tactical creative executions
LIMITATIONS & FUTURE STUDY
Limitations Limited number of interview studies Limited number of survey results
Future Study Speak to other agencies
Traditional, PR, media Speak to clients
REFERENCESEwing, M. T., De Bussy, N. M., & Caruana, A. (2000). Perceived agency politics and conflicts
of interest as potential barriers to IMC orientation. Journal of Marketing Communications, 6(2), 107-119.
Keller, K. L. (2009). Building strong brands in a modern marketing communications environment. Journal of Marketing Communications, 15(2-3), 139-155.
Kliatchko, J. (2008). Revisiting the IMC construct. International Journal of Advertising, 27(1), 133-160.
Liodice, B. (2008, June 9). Essentials for integrated marketing. Advertising Age. Retrieved February 16, 2011, from http://adage.com/cmostrategy/article?article_id=127599
Parekh, R., & Klaassen, A. (2008). As the lines blur, digital agencies are taking lead. (Cover story). Advertising Age, 79(40), 1-27.
Schultz, D. E., & Kitchen, P. J. (1997). Integrated marketing communications in U.S. advertising agencies: An exploratory study. Journal of Advertising Research, 37(5), 7-18.
Stammerjohan, C., Wood, C. M., Chang, Y., & Thorson, E. (2005). An empirical investigation of the interaction between publicity, advertising, and previous brand attitudes and knowledge. Journal of Advertising, 34(4), 55-67.
Waller, David, Shao, Alan T. and Bao, Yeqing (2010). ‘Client influence and advertising standardization: a survey of ad agencies’, The Services Industries Journal, First published on: 10 August 2010