Sunday, February 26, 2006
Burgers
Why is it that sometimes we seem to work on auto-pilot? If you have a question - I have an answer! In fact, often we are really efficient, answering many questions with the same answer…
Follow me here… We need good people. Sometimes we interview and reject them because they don’t know our answers. By the way, it’s too often answers about the details of direct mail production they don’t know.
We read about new channels and talk about agnostic planning. We play with our iPods and other cool gadgets and gizmos and then we give our clients predictable and safe program ideas.
We say we believe in insights and preach the need for consumer/user understanding. We are passionate about how we make the consumer the hero. Yet how often do we really use the tools we have to dive deeply into the psyche of our targets and deliver richly layered thinking to drive our ideas and programs? How often do we just go with what we have or what we think?
Data is the bedrock of our business; the price of entry; the basics. How many of our engagements really, really take advantage of true data sources and provide us and our clients with informed thinking and planning? How often do we just let it go because “they” won’t let us at it?
Needless to say, the creative product – as in “the stuff” – is the tipping point for all we do. It is the element that can make or break us more than any other. It’s “the fun”, and yet too often it becomes our Achilles heel; the element that sours client relationships; the big disappointer. And, how often do we blame the client for the bad work?
Bottom-line – I know I’m being harsh and that some of you are shaking your heads thinking not me, not our work. No doubt that is true for some, yet too often – way too often – we have the answers before we even know the questions, and the results are some of what I have wailed on above.
One of the great hosts of late night TV in the USA put it all in perspective for me:
“I went into a McDonald’s yesterday and said, ‘I’d like some fries.’ The girl at the counter said, ‘Would you like some fries with that?’”
- Jay Leno
Next time you get asked for fries – offer the burger and a shake too…
Still in college I found out how to derail the automatic pilot at McDonalds. Just ask for a cheeseburger without cheese. 'Oh, you want a hamburger!' No, I want a cheeseburger without cheese. The policy was (at least in those days) that they had to make one for you using all the cheeseburger ingredients without well... the cheese. Do they taste different? Oh yes and the cheeseburger without cheese was at least fresh. I haven't tried this trick since. Now living in Paris I should maybe go out there and ask for a Royal Without Cheese...
Posted by Matt Vermeulen on 2006-02-27 15:49:22
‘How many of our engagements really, really take advantage of true data sources and provide us and our clients with informed thinking and planning? How often do we just let it go because “they” won’t let us at it’ David Sable Too often the problem is not how many of us just let it go - but rather how many of us really WANT to know ourselves?! How can we expect our clients to make the time or give true importance to these elements if we ourselves do not? Just as we need to believe in what we are selling to the client creatively – we need to believe in data and planning before the client will. With a Director of Planning as a brother, and having spent a good month whilst freelancing seated in the Planning Department (it was the only desk free), I feel I am able to say (hand on heart) that many of us in client services do not appreciate or understand the time it takes to craft these insights – and therefore let it go because we don’t know the arguments to make to change “their” minds. To truly get the most out of our work – we should push back and start training the client to understand how much better a campaign could be with a little extra planning. In our lunchtime sessions we learn how to run meetings, how to sell creative, how to write a brief – but we haven’t once heard – how to get the most out of Planning for your client…. Is this not a shame? We creative endless plans based on production timelines and how long we need to give our creative teams to come up with that ‘hit idea’ but do we actually know how long it takes to analyse data? 9 days is often a good indication I am told. With enough forethought, and a budget, our planning departments can discover new customer avenues, tell us why our ‘hit idea’ may not work with the supplied data list and ensure the quality of the finished project is first rate. Understanding the creative process is a must for Client Services – we’d never baulk at taking the time to understand it – but along with new marketing mediums (remember how hard selling interactive was to clients at the start) so too must we take the time to understand the role planning and data analysis has in the future of our work. And whilst I may have just undertaken Client Services suicide – I know at least my brother will be proud *grin*
Posted by Suzanne Donovan on 2006-02-27 16:37:34
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