5 things your agency should do for you

If you’re in marketing or PR, chances are you’ll be working with at least one agency, at least once. Heck, it’s part of the job description. Whether that agency is providing you with creative services, media buying, event or PR services, there are 5 things a good agency should do for you. If they don’t, ask them to. And if they still don’t, change them. I can recommend a few :-)

1. Insight

Your agency should provide you with insight. By default, they’ve had more exposure to the ins and outs of their specific field, and they should be able to guide you. For example, I was recently organizing an event to open a new premise, and it was my agency that guided me on start times (I was thinking of a different hour, which was Bucharest-appropriate, but not necessarily appropriate in that particular city.) They advised me on press gifts (what is customary there, what would be best received) and the timing of the food service. This is not rocket science, it’s just insight into how people act (and react) in specific circumstances. But it can make or break an event.

2. Competence

A good rule of thumb is that your agency should know more than you. If it doesn’t, you’re in for a rough time. For example, you can’t become a marketer without knowing at least the basics of media buying, understanding some measurement, and some terms. Your agency should be way beyond that. The merest junior should know more about all of these things than you, or your whole department combined. You are trusting your brand, and a whole lot of money to your media agency, and you’re relinquishing a lot of control over the audience for your message. They’d better be competent to handle it, from the strategic to the execution. They should be able to see flaws, if the campaign is not gelling correctly, they should be able to balance frequency and visibility for your messages, and they should be able to see what you want, rather than what you ask for. This leads me to the next must:

3. Creative execution

Few marketers or communicators are excellent in any one, let alone all, the skills needed to conduct good marketing activities. Sometimes, you have vision, but you have no idea how that vision can be executed. This is what your agency should do for you: take that vision, and turn it into actionable material. If your vision is for quirkiness and unconventional media, the agency should translate that into fact. They should scout unusual opportunities, create some new ones, integrate them and deliver on your vision creatively. If you come up with a concept for a design, your agency should be able to deliver a design that embodies your message, and incorporates your requirements without compromising their creativity and design knowledge (which is, or should be, as per point 2, superior to yours).

4. Reach

It’s not difficult to explain this one, although it has a double meaning. Your agency should be able to tap into a pool of contacts, suppliers, media outlets, journalist etc. that is much wider and more diverse than yours. In addition to its wider reach, your agency should be able to actually reach the people you need: contact them, and get them to act or to respond in ways you cannot.

5. Strategy

If needed, they should be able to strategize on your behalf. If that is not needed, that they should understand your strategic imperatives, and make sure that their part of the campaign, event or project, is in alignment with those objectives you set forth. The biggest fault of an agency is being an island, where all it needs to do is respond straightforwardly to client requests. If you communicate your strategy, your strategic concerns, and your strategic constraints to the agency, it should be able to work to accomplish them.

I am fortunate that all the agencies I work with meet these 5 requirements. And how could they not, when they employ this caliber of people.

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Posted under Marketing vibes

This post was written by Corina on November 27, 2008

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When not to issue a press release

When not to issue a press release?

1. When you’ve got nothing to say.

It’s amazing how many companies miss the mark on this one. I’ve learned from another blogger (can’t quite remember who) that the litmus test of a press release should be: “If this were an article, would I forward it to a friend to read it?” and if the answer is no, then don’t send the press release. Why do we then still send them, when it’s clear that we’ve got nothing to say?

Partially, it’s the client’s fault. Many expect their PR department or agency to show evidence of their work. The principle is that if you’re salaried or on retainer, you should do something to earn your money. Sometimes the client desires exposure for something that the PR knows does not have mass appeal, and pushes for a press release. Many PRs comply.

Partially, it’s the industry in Romania. I’ve spoken to several PRs who say that pitching individual stories to journalists is something they seldom engage in, because there’s not a lot of response. The media is rather generalized, with limited trade media in which to place a story without universal appeal.

Partially, it’s the PR him or herself, just phoning it it. In the hands of an expert, drafting a press release is a 30 to 45 minute tasks, provided you have the right quote, the leeway to create one, or access to a quotable source.  Developing a story individually for a media outlet takes much longer.

And sometimes, the cause is just ignorance.

2. When you’re whitewashing.

Recently, there was a major screw-up at an opening event for a new company. It was covered in the press and on the main blogs (as evidence of bad organization and self-promotion), but what struck me the most was that the day after the screw-up, which made many laugh and many cringe and was, by that time, public knowledge, the company’s PR agency sent a blithe after-the-event release counting participants and saying how much they enjoyed themselves. The contrast between what others reported and what the press release revealed was very sharp, and to the detriment of the client. In crisis situations, a press release is never recommended, personal contact being preferred, but a press release explaining the screw-up and company assurances that it was a one-off wouldn’t have been entirely amiss. A whitewashing press release in the face of glaring evidence is never a good idea. Other means of restoring the tarnished reputation must be employed.

I’m sure there are other situations in which sending a press release should not be considered, but these are my top two. I’d be curious what others think on the subject.

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Posted under PRealities

This post was written by Corina on November 26, 2008

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