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Archive for August 12th, 2009

Jumping The Shark

Jumping The Shark

Wells Rich Greene. N.W. Ayer. DArcy. And now maybe Bates.

All these agencies at some point in the last 10 years went from being billion dollar companies to out of business.

How does this freefall happen? Why are some ad agencies able to stay in business for a long time while others have the halflife of Uranium?

Im certain the people who ran the agencies I just named did not sit down one day and say Were gonna do shitty work treat our employees like crap and run this place into the ground.

So what happened??

Can we pinpoint any specific times when ad agencies Jump The Shark? If you dont know what Im referring to go to www.jumptheshark.com and then continue reading this column

This phenomenon doesnt only occur to big behemoth agencies.

In my days as an ad school student I distinctly remember there were some shops mostly boutiques everyone talked about. If you were one of the lucky few to land a gig there you would be handed the keys to the kingdom.

These days some of those shops are long gone and some are still around and doing good work. But theyre not hot anymore. Theyve been replaced a by a new crop of It shops who possess whatever the It factor might be that gets students to drool over them.

Did the oncehot shops stop entering awards shows? Did they give up on press releases so you never read about them anymore? Did they take on accounts that lowered their creative standards? Did management changes affect the momentum of the agency?

It is true that a shuffle in management personnel can result in a new philosophy better or worse work and affect the company profile or morale. After all the fish rots from the head down.

Im sure you have as I have encountered agencies that want to become the next hot shop. They want to become gold pencil winners. They want to take the work to the next level. They want to pursue more highprofile national accounts. All of which is very easy to say and incredibly hard to do. Invariably those things rarely happen when a shops cultural DNA prevents it. You cant polish a turd.

But theres always hope or another open ad assignment or another great account up for review. Thats why no two days in this business are ever alike.

I firmly believe any ad agency given the right conditions can improve itself make more money grow do great work win awards and be the kind of agency people would kill to work at. Your agency can be one of those agencies.

Just make sure your agency never hires Ted McGinley to be the new Creative Director.

About the writer:nbsp;nbsp;Branding. Religion. Censorship. Office politics. Global politics. Sexual politics. And getting drunk during a job interview.
Since 2002 Danny G. a.k.a. Dan Goldgeier has been writing the most provocative advertising columns ever published. They’re all witty thoughtful and probing and a must read for those who want a perspective rarely seen in traditional industry publications.
An Atlantabased copywriter and ad school graduate Dan has worked at shops big and small. He reads incessantly about advertising and is a whiz at rock roll trivia. Learn more about him by visiting his copywriting website or AdColumnist.com the View From The Cheap Seats Archive website. You may also find articles by Danny G at TalentZoo.com.

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