Showing posts with label Marketing 3.0. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marketing 3.0. Show all posts

8.7.09

Agency Management System

Agency Management System:
Integrated Operations & Planning Solution for Marketing‐ Creative Agency Engagement
_____________________________________________
By Chetan Saiya

Marketing Resource Management (MRM) is a process of end to end marketing optimization,
from planning and budgeting, through marketing content management, to global marketing
execution and analysis.

A crucial aspect of MRM is the management and coordination of creative agency
operations. Agency operations are driven by expensive resources working within a tight
timeline to create artistic works for objective marketing benefits. Allocation of suitable and
consistent resources from the agency is vital to the delivery of creatives, with marketing
objectives fitting in to an overall plan.

In medium to large marketing functions, a multiple of creative agencies may need to plug in
and deliver solutions across brands or even to a particular brand or service. An efficient
marketing function looks to coordinate, cost manage and make the operation and products
visible and accessible across board. An agency management tool, deployed by the marketer
and shared with the key stakeholders, formats and integrates operation details, manages
times and costs, creates a central repository of digital products, enables report generation
on various parameters and builds a live bank of data for reference and use.
In the current scenario, brand managers and marketing managers dealing with creative
agencies follow ad hoc systems to manage these relationships. Notes recording plans and
spreadsheets recording quantitative data have limited portability and lend themselves
poorly to collation and parameterization. Cross referencing, report generation, comparison
of models, efficiency, costs and times need to be made manually. Poorly connected dots in
the marketing landscape results in an incomplete picture and, importantly, scalable and
usable lessons remain invisible.
Limited availability of agency work rates, profiles and contracts makes it difficult for key
functionaries to steer operations and enforce compliance.
When the smallest of the top 100 advertisers reportedly spend a minimum of $300 million a
year on advertising the sheer financial benefits of an agency management system is huge.
Such a system has the potential to save at least around $3 million a year for the marketer on
accountability, compliance, efficiency and better rates from the advertising agencies.
Increasingly, when CMOs are under pressure from CEOs and CFOs for more accountability of
advertising dollar, management systems make a whole lot of business sense. Business practices benefit from usefulness of management systems for SOX Compliance,
parameterized report generation and easily accessible audit reports.
Agency management systems are now part of the MRM deployment by the marketer and
shared with key stakeholders like advertising agencies, brand managers, marketing
managers, sales force and other functionaries. These end‐to‐end processes initiate, monitor
and parameterize the marketer‐creative agency engagement from job to project levels. A
creative job and project is reviewed, steered and approved by the content creation teams
across marketing and agency. Resource allocation and cost of jobs are quickly available for
comparison with the estimate and budget. Accountability across levels keeps this system of
working highly efficient and cost effective. Repository of digital work created out of this
process is shared with stakeholders for quick deployment and seamless brand consistency.
Dashboard and multiple parameterized reports keep the marketing finger on the button for
steering any project at any point in time.
Key benefit 1: Campaign budget utilization. Allocation and audit of resources
An agency management system requires that the marketer shares with the creative agency
the budget outlay and the projects to be taken up for the year. Resources are accordingly
evaluated in terms of experience and suitability, and allotted for an agreed upon time for
the project. This accountability for every job by time and by resources creates a high
efficiency framework for jobs to be delivered, meeting objectives and costs. The agency on
its part is on top of its manpower planning, while the marketer is assured of committed
resources and accurate billing for them. And further, because each job requires such inputs,
‘blended rates’ are avoided and costs are according to job merit and scope.
Key benefit 2: Conformation to contracts, fulfillment
An agency management system ensures fulfillment of all financial management related
steps in a marketer‐ agency engagement leading to a more efficient and cost effective
relationship. An annual Statement of Work (SOW) clearly defines the projects that the
agency/vendor will be working on for the year. It can track ongoing SOW modifications and
corresponding approvals allowing the agency to make the necessary changes to the initial
SOW. It can track actual spend on a monthly basis per brand/agency relationship. It is a
transparent monitoring process that can also manage agency profiles, including rate cards
by different services and volumes and generate reports to capture varying levels of
information.
Key benefit 3: Central Repository
A central repository of the marketer‐agency engagement guidelines and operational
information is visible to key functionaries. Contracts, policies, modifications are easily
available for conformation checks. Rate cards, resource deployment, skill profiles can be
pulled out, reviewed and co‐related with creative products and marketing objectives.

To sum up:
  • Agency management systems drive accountability and transparency in the marketer-agency relationship.
  • Results in saving marketing operation dollars‐ up to 10%. More accountability, leading to efficient job planning, aided by system driven rate definition, resulting in better job rates.
  • Better compliance and fulfilment of contracts, tracking modifications and deviations. Better business practice, compliant with laws, auditable spends.
  • A system with high visibility within the marketer landscape, of different parameters of agency engagement. Like service rates, time rates, resources and skills and more. Generate reports with different correlations for innovative perspectives.

About the Author:
Chetan Saiya is the Founder, Chairman and CEO of Assetlink Corporation, a leader
in Marketing Operations Management solutions that serves Global 2000
companies worldwide

11.6.09

Marketing 3.0

Marketing 3.0

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marketing_3.0


Definition

• Marketing 3.0 is a term which describes a perceived third generation of integrated marketing communications solutions which individuals and communities discover that existing and newly-identified needs and wants may be satisfied by the products and services of others. • It has led to the development and evolution of web-based applications such as social-networking sites, video-sharing sites, wikis, and blogs. • As the web moves from 2.0 to 3.0, marketing as well needs to evolve to embrace new technologies, attitudes and behaviors that are shaping our social digital lifestyle. Marketing must follow the way we interact, inform ourselves, the way we buy and consume products and services.



Characteristics

1. Social media will continue to grow to new users and usages fulfilling individual’s needs to gain momentum and become the branding underground. 2. TV viewership is declining. 3. Old-school ad campaigns focused mainly on print, radio, and, in particular, televisions aren’t nearly as effective as they once were. 4. Today’s Consumers… is intelligent, knowledgeable, demanding, empowered, has no loyalty, skeptical, accessible, more powerful, and connected. 5. “Word of mouth” is driving fast today’s consumer behavior process and directs his attitude toward brands (products, services, countries, causes and persons). 6. “Consumer Behavior” is straightforward and easy to understand. 7. “Mass Marketing” is alive and its objective switched from to change Consumer Attitudes to change Consumer Behavior via capturing and rewarding consumer attention. 8. “Brand dialog” Consumers want to have Conversations with brands in multilayered experiences. 9. “ROI “is redefined to say Relevance to consumer’s life stage, Originality and creativity in messaging, Impact and how closer brands engage with consumers lifestyle. 10. “Touch Points” are on the move, cluttered and competitive, a very different set of tools, concepts and practices is considered necessary. 11. “Brand friends” and advocators not to lour traffic to an outlet or a microsite. 12. “Brands that Inspire and empowers” not brands endorsed by –today- celebrity


References & Applications

http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/05/sign-spinners.html

http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/04/best-practice-of-site-takeovers.html

http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/06/qr-code-living-book.html

http://www.hoffmanlewis.com/PBA_EBook_3_2009.pdf

http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/06/reversevertising-hbo-gets-its-fangs-out.html

7 Skills for a Post-Pandemic Marketer

The impact of Covid-19 has had a significant impact across the board with the marketing and advertising industry in 2020, but there is hope...