About 35 years ago, for all practical purposes, the internet had no legitimate commercial purpose, outside of its primary purposes today, porn and sex-trafficking.
eBusiness, a phrase IBM owned, in which you could sell things, take care of customers, track inventory and your supply chain and countless other things hadn't yet been invented. In effect, the internet was around but no one knew what it was good for.
In 1999, I joined Ogilvy for my first stint. At the time, Ogilvy was a behemoth of an agency--occupying maybe ten floors in a gigantic mid-town-ish office tower.
For whatever turf-war reasons, Ogilvy and Mather creatives sat on a different floor from Ogilvy Direct creatives and stuffed into a corner on that floor were a punch of pocket protectors who worked for Ogilvy Interactive.
The Ogilvy and Mather kids were the cool kids. From a revenue and prestige point of view, they ruled the roost.
However, before long, Ogilvy Interactive began booming. Booming, as in doubling in size every six months or so. Even so, the work done at Ogilvy Interactive was largely pedestrian.
Ogilvy and Mather shaped brands--found their voice, developed campaigns, was in key meetings. Ogilvy Interactive executed off of Ogilvy and Mather's campaigns and strategies. At their best, Ogilvy Interactive used the strengths of their medium to enhance their message. But there was a lot of digitizing and gimmicking the main agency's work. And not a lot of brand leadership.
At that time if you roamed the halls of Ogilvy Interactive a common plaint was, "we just want a seat at the [client] table." That's a way of saying, I think, how most people feel. They want to have a key role. They want to have a voice and be heard.
That phrase "we just want a seat at the [client] table" always stayed with me. First, it implied that someone else had a better seat at the table and you'd take a less-good seat just to have a chance.
When I fast-forward to today--when I see an agency like Ogilvy New York which had close to 2,000 employees in 2016 and has probably about one-tenth that number today--it's made me realize something.
The boasting about awards--usually spurious awards for not-real work for not-real clients bolstered by not-real results--is not about what agencies are supposed to be about. Agencies aren't supposed to be about our success. We're supposed to be about clients' success. I'd bet many of the people reading this now can name dozens, even hundreds, of pop stars, athletes, actors. I can't imagine anyone could name a single agent. And, tautologically, agencies are agents. We exist, or used to to do a client's bidding.
What's happened to the industry is simple.
In its zeal to answer procurement, in its eagerness to cut costs and "return shareholder value" (and eight-figure payouts to the c-suite--none of whom have ever created an ad) agencies left the table.
Client leadership is never in a scope. Saying you'll form a closeness--a business intimacy with a client, learning (and caring) about their ways and means is, in fact, out of scope.
So, the agency business degenerated from having a seat at the client's metaphoric table merely to making the requisite amount of client-scoped rectangles. Like a fast-food chain my increase its profits by using a lesser-grade of hamburger meat, or reducing the size of a patty, the agency business has done the same.
People with little knowledge and experience make the work. Or algorithms do. And the quicker you can make the work (which usually means giving the client just what they asked for) the more money can be made.
Agencies stopped leading clients.
Agencies stopped guiding clients.
Agencies stopped being regarded as key to a clients' success.
As scopes and margins decreased, agency ambitions decreased with them.
When material business success was no longer a possibility, the industry substituted trophyization as a proxy for real accomplishment.
In short, no one has a seat at the table anymore.
When I was living all this at Ogilvy, I often found myself in a slough of despond. One night I received a 1200 word note from Chris Wall, who rose to become Vice Chairman of the joint. Chris sensed my melancholy and sent these words.
What's happened is that as an industry, we no longer know how to make things happen for brands. Because we do ads not for the companies that pay us, not for their success, but for ours. That's why we no longer have a seat at any table.
We've become an industry of low-wage executors.
About to be replaced by lower-wage executors...AI.
With GeorgeCo., LLC, a Delaware Company, I set out to be the first person a client calls when they need thinking.
Not just the first person they call when they need an ad.
The first person they call when they're up shit's creek.
In other words, I demand a seat not merely at the table, but alongside the CEO. If I'm not on speed-dial, something is wrong.
Around the time I got that note above from Chris Wall, Lou Gerstner, the CEO of IBM retired. I saved Lou's last IBM annual report because in it there was a spread that reminds me of what advertising can be, should be and must be again. I saved this annual report because it is part of my brief as an agency.
Just because I'm an arse, I'll underscore a bit for emphasis.