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MAtrix Ping Pong

Posted byMatt Hubbard
A colleague sent this to me yesterday and I laughed out loud!  Enjoy.
 
 

Desperately Seeking Hybrids

Posted byKeith Goldberg

This is not a piece about automobiles. It’s about people.

 

However, if you carry the analogy a step forward, the similarities are crystal clear: Just as survival has forced carmakers to re-imagine the future of the automobile, it has forced agencies to re-imagine the complexion of their workforce.

 

This is, perhaps, one of the positive developments to come out of the transformative recession we find ourselves in.

 

When I entered the agency business in the late ‘80s as a junior copywriter, brimming with excitement and a much fuller head of hair, I can remember the rare times I was allowed to attend important client meetings. Men and women I admired, those who founded the agency and cultivated big reputations, would unfailingly boom the great agency-to-client mantra at every opportunity: “If you want to succeed you need to break down your silos!”

 

Back at the agency, however, we didn’t much heed our own valuable advice.

 

Account executives “managed” the client, though it’s not like they were imbued with some secret mojo. Strategic planners were ordained as deep thinkers, though the conclusions in their briefs—even for brands in different categories and with different challenges—all seemed strikingly similar. Copywriters and art directors, producers and designers, were often barricaded on a separate floor and expected to use their self-imposed exile to conceive the kind of brilliant ideas that only truly “creative” people can conjure up.

 

This insane construct would then come to full flower at presentation time—when it would take three people, each with a distinct stand-up role in front of the client, to present a simple solution.

 

The scary thing is, at many of today’s agencies—advertising, digital, direct response, experience marketing—much hasn’t changed.

 

That is why many shops have died and why others will lose the evolutionary race against time.

 

Agencies that are surviving, and those that will thrive into the future, now share something increasingly in common: They are stocking their talent larder with the marketing equivalents of “hybrids.”

 

These hybrids are people who have evolved from core competencies such as account, creative, strategy, media, experiential, etc., but who are less defined by these labels and more acknowledged for:

>Looking at almost everything creatively

>Having a passion for problem-solving

>Enjoying the challenge of getting others on their side

>Being highly inquisitive

>Becoming easily bored

>Seeing everything that happens around them as a potential new business opportunity

>Infecting the enterprise with positive energy

 

Hard to find these folks, you say? Absolutely. But they do exist. And the war for talent, especially in this market, is all about them.

 

You may have noticed that some of your competitors are hiring people with titles such as “innovation officer” (and letting them innovate) or “engagement director” (a person who is laser focused on getting the brand engaged with the customer, regardless of media).

 

These are positive signs.

 

They point to the fact that some executives realize the way to make themselves and their clients successful is not to keep tinkering with the same old agency mechanics, but to build a vehicle from the bottom up, powered by a new breed of marketing person who will be the engine capable of taking the industry into the future.

 

Buckle up. It’s gonna be fun.

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Don't Let a Recession Make You Forget How to Market

Posted byAngela Heiple
We can all use a little help from our marketing friends now and again, even if it's a reassuring pat-on-the-back that says "yep, you're doing the right thing" or a kick-in-the-butt that says "stop freaking out, and breathe".  Especially during a time of such uncertainty when it might not feel as simple as taking the "last time this happened, we did X..." approach.
 
So, if you're open to advice or words of reassurance from smart, successful marketers and trustworthy sources, check out this Advertising Age article, 10 Principles for Bad Times that Work in Good Times, Too.  In one concise headline, the author reminds us that we don't have to reinvent the wheel or find a magic bullet; rather trust what we already know works. 
 
Here are a few good daily reminders (in good times and bad) that I highlighted in the article before pinning it up in my office.
 
1. Honestly assess your strengths and weaknesses.
 
2. Get back to the basics.
 
3. Thriving beyond the current situation means knowing where you want your company to go.
 
4. If cuts are essential, at least maintain visibility with an umbrella brand.  Allow that brand to carry others if necessary.
 
5. A recession cannot stop innovation.
 
6. Build campaigns around one big, central idea--and push the same message through all the marketing "pipes".
 
7. Optimism is a key ingredient in inspiring consumers and building great brands.
 
 
About YSA

A place where creative folks and clients, account people and strategists gather to discuss Live Communications and its singular ability to create deeper, more meaningful relationships between

customers and brands. 

 

So pull up your keyboard and raise a few questions, share some ideas, provide a little inspiration.  Oh, yeah... and get comfortable.  After all, it's your place.

 

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