Getting Better and Better at Doing the Wrong Thing - Winmo
The article critiques advertising agencies for focusing on tracking inputs like hours worked rather than outputs such as deliverables produced, highlighting how the industry's adoption of time-based billing—originating from law firms in the 1980s—has led to declining profit margins and client dissatisfaction, prompting marketers to seek new compensation models that better drive business results rather than merely renting agency labor.
Can you imagine Tesla not tracking how many cars they built last year, or Apple being clueless about the number of iPhones produced in the last 12 months?
Such is the state of affairs in agencies today. Ask agency managers to provide a report enumerating the number and nature of outputs produced and you’re likely to get a blank stare. They can, however, provide an incredibly detailed chronicle of inputs — hours worked. This is the equivalent of Comcast tracking the labor time of its service technicians, but not the number of cable systems they installed.
A borrowed system
In the halcyon days of Don Draper, perhaps this didn’t matter. Agencies were earning an average profit margin of 30%, and workload-per-employee was a fraction of what it is in 2018. Agencies didn’t track or bill for their time because they didn’t need to; they were earning full 15% commissions on large media budgets.
The implementation of the time-based billing model — borrowed from law firms by agency leaders like David Ogilvy in the 1980s — was actually a giant step backward for the industry. The result has been a steady decline in profitability every single decade ever since. Today, average agency profit margins hover just below 10%.
At the same time, client satisfaction with this system is at an all-time low. The bi-annual study conducted by the Association of National Advertisers in the U.S. shows that a clear majority of major global marketers want to change the way they compensate their agencies. While cutting costs is an evergreen concern for marketers, this is not their primary motivation for transforming agency remuneration. Rather, marketers need better business results, and they now realize that renting bodies is not a very effective approach for inspiring optimal performance at their agencies.
The knee-jerk reaction on both sides is to engineer more outcome-based agreements, and for the right kinds of clients and opportunities, this can be a potent way to align economic incentives. But there’s a much more elemental approach every agency can adopt starting tomorrow: stop selling inputs and instead sell outputs.
In other words, stop tracking and selling the efforts required to produce deliverables and instead track and sell the deliverables themselves. This not only conforms to the right paradigm of value (we buy the utility of an item, not the effort required to produce it), it also has the added benefit of forcing much better scope definition and management. Instead of buying ill-defined buckets of inputs, marketers can buy the outputs themselves. This helps agencies predict and manage actual workload, and gives marketers the peace of mind they won’t have to deal with agencies pleading for more money because they’re “out of hours.”
Changing a zero sum game
Making this transformation is a joint venture, requiring a different remuneration dialogue that focuses on what marketers really buy — outputs and outcomes — not hours, hourly rates, or staffing plans. It becomes the agency’s business to manage its internal costs in a way that returns them a fair profit.
The “time machine” that exists inside agencies — the systems that support recording, reporting, analyzing, and attempting to manage “time” — can amount to almost 20% of an agency’s total cost structure. Imagine if that effort were redirected toward measuring what really matters: project velocity, average turnaround time by project type, degree of completion by project phase, percentage of deadlines met, and — most importantly — the effectiveness of the agency’s work and recommendations.
Because agencies and their clients are focused on tracking and managing the wrong thing — inputs instead of outputs and outcomes — they are stuck on a hamster wheel of declining margins for the agency and declining marketing effectiveness for the brand. Marketers cannot hope to secure most talented people — and agencies can’t afford to pay them — if both parties are locked in a zero-sum game centered on the cost of inputs.
It’s high time to move beyond the wringing of hands about the difficulty of changing this system and start by changing the dialogue. As Peter Drucker once advised, there comes a time when we need to “Stop solving the problem and start pursuing the opportunity.”
Related
The Ad Industry's Top Sales Activations - Winmo
The article from Winmo outlines key sales activations in the advertising industry—highlighting traditional advertising campaigns, which 75% of ANA respondents find effective; influencer marketing, which can yield 11 times more ROI than traditional ads; and experiential marketing, which can boost sales by up to 34% through immersive consumer engagement—emphasizing the importance for sales professionals to strategically choose these tactics to optimize conversions and business growth.
15 OTT Spenders Planning in Q3 2021
The article discusses the growing importance of OTT (over-the-top) streaming platforms for media planners in Q3 2021, highlighting that by 2024 streaming services are expected to reach 210 million subscribers, and emphasizing key factors such as ad reach, cost per thousand, frequency, impact, and selectivity that brands—often with larger budgets due to OTT's newer status—must consider when planning advertising campaigns to effectively target audiences like Gen-Z and Millennials.
5 Marketing Budget Predictions for 2023 - Winmo
In 2023, marketing budgets are projected to grow by an average of 5.6%, with significant increases in social media advertising—driven by rising consumer engagement and new platforms—alongside expanded spending on influencer marketing, which is expected to exceed $4.5 billion, and continued investment in video advertising to boost brand awareness and conversions.
Winmo Adds Social Spending Across 5 Platforms (July 2023 Update)
In July 2023, Winmo enhanced its B2B sales intelligence platform by adding social media advertising spend data across TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube, allowing sales teams to search and analyze brand social ad budgets by various purchasing methods—including programmatic, programmatic direct, house ads, ad networks, and direct buys—to better identify opportunities and connect with decision-makers in the US and UK advertising markets.
Winmo: Win More Business with Real-time Sales Intelligence
Winmo is a top-rated sales intelligence platform that helps businesses identify high-potential leads, connect with verified brand and agency decision-makers, predict agency reviews and hires months in advance, and gain insights into advertising spend and media trends to accelerate deal closures across advertising, ad sales, adtech, and sponsorship sectors.
The Disruption of Sports Sponsorships (And 50 Brands Planning in Q4)
The sports sponsorship landscape, traditionally stable for decades, is now disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic and social justice movements causing game cancellations and politicization, prompting bold brands like Nike and Coca-Cola to leverage cause-driven messaging and virtual experiences to differentiate themselves amid cautious advertisers, with 50 major sponsors actively planning their Q4 strategies.