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This is the personal blog of John F. Morton. It's where I talk about the stuff that interests me. Primarily technology, marketing and pop culture. If you are looking for my portfolio of work, visit johnfmorton.com. Thanks for stopping by!

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Filtered by Category: Internet

Monday, April 28, 2008

Ad Agencies Have a Relationship Problem

I hope my clients will still like me.

I’ve never seen the play I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change, but its title has come to mind during more than a couple recent conversations when the topic of traditional advertising agencies and their clients comes up. If I were to write a play about the ad business today, I’d call it I Like You Sometimes, You Cost Too Much For What You Deliver, And If You Change, I’m Leaving You. Clearly my title is not as catchy as the original, but I think it sums up the situation; fundamentally, most advertising agencies have a relationship problem with their clients. (I say most, not all. If you’ve got examples of good agency/client relationships, please send me an email. Better yet, post a comment about it.)

I Love You, You're Perfect, Now ChangeClients who have existing relationships with agencies are seldom willing to accept radically different solutions from those agencies because doing so breaks the rules that govern the relationship. When agencies break the rules by behaving in unexpected ways, i.e. delivering radical solutions rather than the expected ones, at a minimum they are not taken seriously and in some case they are punished for it.

Unfortunately, that’s just human behavior.

Think about any person in your life with whom you’ve had a long relationship and now imagine that over the course of a few days they’ve radically changed somehow and are acting in an unexpected way. What type of change? To make it interesting, let’s say they’ve suddenly converted to some new religion which requires serious evangelizing or maybe they’ve discovered they’ve got to have a sex change to fully express who they are. Maybe it’s both. When that person suddenly starts breaking the rules you have both abided by in your relationship, you become wary of that person. You might even think they’d lost their marbles.

Ad agencies haven’t lost their marbles though. Agencies get a lot of flack for not understanding the state of the digital world, but I’ve been inside a lot of them and there are some really smart people there. Putting their new media understanding to practical application has been difficult because delivering solutions based on that knowledge isn’t what’s expected of them. Their current clients see the agency as delivering a particular thing which is probably what attracted them to the agency in the first place, be it TV ads, media buys, banner ads, Flash web sites, or whatever. Clients expect to keep receiving that same exact thing from that relationship. Agencies might believe the thing they deliver is “great ideas to solve marketing problems” but clients are just people and people tend to remember the concrete deliverable, a TV spot or an online banner campaign with a landing page, rather than the intangible, an idea or concept that led to an execution (i.e. that damn TV ad).

As Not Seen On Dr. PhilWhat’s an ad agency with an identity crisis to do? If you think about this as a real-world relationship, the answer is pretty clear. That doesn’t make for an easy solution to follow through with though.

Let’s think about you and your friend again who’ve had that long-standing relationship. This time, it’s not your friend who’s suddenly started acting in unexpected ways; it’s you who has realized something’s changed in your life and to be true to your beliefs you need to start expressing yourself in a completely new way. How to do you handle this old relationship? What do you do?

Option #1:
The give-into-the-fear approach. The easiest short-term choice is to choose not to tell your friend that things have changed. You can go on acting the way around him as you always have but your focus on maintaining that relationship will wain and the truth will start to show through lack of attention. The longer this goes on the more you just want to get as far away from this relationship as possible.

Option #2:
The one-day-at-a-time approach. Don’t get too hasty. You can take gradual path towards revealing the new you to your old friend. Maybe you’re just going through a phase anyway, right? You can drop hits about new outlook on life and hope your friend is receptive but you can still go out to the same old hangouts and still do a lot of the familiar things. In the short term, things are going to be fine. You need to be careful to not backslide into your old ways though. It’s easy to confuse slow progress with no progress.

Option #3:
The we’ve-got-to-talk approach. This is where you drop the bomb and see how strong your relationship really is. You are either going to make or break this relationship. If it goes all wrong, this whole thing could be history. You and your friend part and go forward following your own paths. If it goes well though, the benefits could be tremendous for both of you.

When it comes to the business relationships, what options do agencies chose? Small steps or no steps at all seem like a risky way to move forward in the digital space which is known for moving very fast.

An ad agency that goes for option #1 or #2 should work overtime at forging new client relationships that let them be the new-media-savvy shop they really are deep down. Of course, if they choose option #3 with at least one current client and the meeting goes well, they’re much more likely to have tangible experience with a long-standing client that will benefit them with getting those new clients who share their point of view.

Posted by John on 04/28 at 09:10 PM
AdvertisingInternetMarketing • (0) CommentsPermalink
Monday, April 14, 2008

Talking with Colmeia TV About Agencies, Advertising Failure & Geekery

Last week I had the pleasure of meeting Eduardo Camargo from Colmeia. He, Vini Reis (a friend and former colleague of mine) and I had a great time hanging out and talking about the things that excite a geeks like us: technology, innovation, marketing and more. Eduardo taped it and put part of our conversation on Colmeia’s vlog which you can see below. You can also follow Eduardo and Vini on Twitter.


colmeia na gringa | @NYC | episodio 2 from eduardo camargo on Vimeo.

Posted by John on 04/14 at 10:34 AM
InternetMarketingSocialTechnologyTrendsVideo • (0) CommentsPermalink
Sunday, March 30, 2008

How To Make a Mix Tape In the Digital Age

My Mux Tape

I love music and used to spend hours making the perfect mix tape to share with my friends. I didn’t realize how much I missed it. If you’ve got some MP3’s, some time, and some friends you want to make a mix for, check out muxtape.com. If you make a mix tape, send me a link.

BTW, Music companies, if you are listening, don’t kill this site. If someone can make the act of listening and sharing music this fun, I’m sure there are ways you can live with it. Just add a ”buy this track” button next to each song and it’s doing your job for you.

Posted by John on 03/30 at 06:25 PM
InternetMusic • (0) CommentsPermalink
Friday, March 28, 2008

The Elephant in the Room at PSFK Conference New York

The PSFK Elephant

Yesterday I attended PSFK Conference New York. My overriding impression of the conference was that we marketing professionals are all struggling to define what we’re doing. There were loads of smart people presenting their perspective on the web 2.0 world and none of them were wrong, although they often openly contradicted each other.

At one point Rob Kallin, founder of Etsy.com, the online craft market place, and Andrew Hoppin from NASA seemed to be trading jabs about the laugh-ability or viability of Second Life as a useful collaboration tool. Although I personally dislike Second Life due to what I consider a poor user interface, it is valuable to some people. Andrew Hoppin gave the example of people living on the space station being able to share the same virtual space with people back on Earth is a good thing. He’s right! Second Life may be the best existing tool available for that at present.

Noelle Weaver, from SS+K, kicked off the “Social Media” session by asking the attendees how many of them have tried to erase a social media profile in the past few weeks. In a room full of Web 2.0 thinkers, a surprising number of hands went up, roughly 15% by my estimate. A room full of social-media-types erasing profiles? Another interesting contradiction.

By the end of the presentations the Indian proverb about the blind men touching an elephant and then describing what an the animal was like based on their impression. The morale of that story is that basically that people who are too insistent that their personal view is right are ignorant. That wasn’t the case at the PSFK event though. It was about sharing viewpoints and trying to figure out what this gigantic creature in our midst really is. If we keep describing what we feel this thing is and share those thoughts, we’re going to figure it out.

Looking back on the day, Grant McCracken pin-pointed the key to success for all of us in this business with a concept he called “brute noticing.” (Slides from his presentation available here.) It’s a term I really love. He said our clients depend on us “seeing things early and clearly, on grasping new patterns.” Since this creature is growing and changing so fast, no one person can figure it all out alone.

Follow up: PSFK has started posting some of the videos shot that day on YouTube. Below is one where Steve Rubel says the most newsbite-friendly line of the whole conference, “The Web site is dead.” He does admit saying he likes “saying things are dead.” It made for a great line at the conference. For more video from the conference, click here.


Posted by John on 03/28 at 04:47 PM
ConferencesPSFKInternetMarketingSocial • (0) CommentsPermalink
Sunday, March 23, 2008

Two More Links To Make Your Internet Experience Complete

Opinions are like blogs, everybody’s got one. But some blogs are better than others, so I thought I’d share a couple that you might not know about. The first is focused on the ad business, the second is a thoughtful perspective on our culture. Both are worth checking out.

Ad Aged—Will Madison Avenue Become Detroit? by George Tannenbaum, as you might guess, is the advertising focused blog. I worked for George for a couple years and he’s filled with insightful and entertaining observations on the state of the advertising industry plus the state of the rest of the world. Luckily, he now shares them with the blogosphere. Check out “Daily dumbness update” for a good example of his take on the state of advertising. You can tap directly into his POV on Ad Aged every morning.

Chock-A-Blog, by the one-named author “Tom” is a little bit technology, a little bit entertainment industry, a little bit marketing, and, well, a little bit of everything else that catches Tom’s eye. It’s updated sporadically, but there is a new entry you can be sure it’s always well-written. Chock-A-Blog is where I learned about TXT of the Living Dead, the latest version of Night of the Living Dead as recreated by SMS messages. It also had a nice perspective on the end of the writer’s strike with “What to expect when you’re expecting an end to the writers’ strike”. Add to that a critique of the critiques of the new New Museum. Very varied topics, but informative. Be sure to give Chock-A-Blog a try.

Posted by John on 03/23 at 10:44 AM
AdvertisingBloggingInternetMarketingNewsTechnology • (0) CommentsPermalink
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