I tell you what – it’s enough to make an entire section of this small industry of ours paranoid. It would seem, from a reliable source, that during a recent training session provided by a leading industry luminary to a major publisher, the audience were informed that “agencies don’t get it” and although we’re “easily influenced” they’re best of “going straight to the client”.
I of course can’t deny that isn’t the case in all instances, but there are a fair number of us working with our clients and media partners to further the Digital cause and build expertise and centres of excellence in executing recruitment solutions within this emerging medium.
The reality is that the agencies (or at least those who have invested the time, money and resource to learn over the past few years) do ‘get it’, and are not that ‘easily influenced’ – as you will no doubt see from some of the opinions and views shared elsewhere in this blog. Not to mention that, just taking the combined TMP & Barkers client spend alone, there’s a big slice of the agency side of the industry that have quite established teams of professionals with a proven record of not doing too bad a job of “getting it”, at least for those clients who are interested in having “digital got” for them.
After the “feeling” (read: angry outbursts and disgruntled comments) generated by my previous post maybe the odds are really stacked against us agencies and the writing’s indeed on the wall (as so many old hands have feared and prophesised for at least 5 years now), but I truly don’t think so.
I’d like to think that there’s increasingly a place for us to add that all important value and actually assist clients in making sense of the recruitment market and the myriad of candidate engagement channels on offer to them (whether on or offline).
The recruitment marketplace is more confused / confusing than ever, so I’d argue there’s even more reason for an agency / client relationship to help ensure the greatest bang for their buck and the most appropriate response for their rupee. To unlock cost and time efficiencies in any kind of marketing engagement you still need to know where to have your message, what it needs to be saying and how it should be saying it.
If agencies could sustain themselves when there was just the choice between the Times, Telegraph or Guardian (and I don’t believe it was just because they had a mac and a bromide machine and the clients didn’t) then surely the agencies’ future is bright, but it really falls to the agencies themselves to put in place the resource and expertise to understand the options and deliver.
Even, what may be seen by many to be, this late in the virtual day there is still time for agencies to resource to the correct levels in the necessary aspects of the Digital environment and start adding Digital value to their client relationships – clearly a market segment that cannot be ignored. It is probably true – a disconcerting number of agencies may not ‘get it’ – but to tar all of us with a single brush is just wrong.*
*(although if you truly believed my previous post was tarring all media colleagues with the same said single tar brush, which I emphatically re-state it was not, then I do see that perhaps this is some form of wonderful ironic justice coming back at me and my agency peers ;-).
Here’s to the future then, and a grown up industry where real value and insight is tracked, measured and valued, with people judged by the reality of their delivery rather than hollow words and sound-bytes.
So what do the rest of you think (from both sides of the fence – or indeed the 3rd side too, that of clients, yours is the insight that really matters most at the end of the day anyway)? It’d be great to hear from you, so please join the debate – go on, it won’t bite.
:-)
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