Ad agencies are as clueless about social media as they still are about blog advertising, content sponsorship and presence management
I stole that headline from a comment left by respected blogger and Internet marketer B.L. Ochman on a recent post by Rebecca Lieb at ClickZ.
B.L.’s an author and blogger who has written comprehensively about Internet marketing and social media for years. She’s also orchestrated some pretty successful programs for companies ranging from IBM to McGraw Hill. So she knows what she’s talking about.
There are plenty of ad agencies that don’t get social media at all. Of course there are plenty that do. There are also lots of SEO and digital agencies that remain clueless when it comes to building brands. And I’m pretty sure someone could make a list of PR agencies that don’t have the creative chops to generate content that’s actually worthy of an invitation into people’s digital homes and communities. But I digress.
For me, B.L.’s comment and Rebecca’s post are reminders that successful social media programs call for all three: SEO, PR, and content worth remembering. SEO marketers are essential if you want to be search-friendly and findable. PR professionals, once they master the relatively easy task of listening and engaging, are likely to excel at inspiring, building and mobilizing a community of followers. And lo and behold, even as modern marketing makes the transition from one-way communication to a conversation, guess what? Once every brand is on Twitter and Facebook and YouTube, once there are more conversations going on than anyone can ever keep track of, one of the only things that will matter is the idea and the experience or content that brings that idea to life.
Add to that the eventual arrival of Web 3.0 (or whatever we end up calling it) and the increased contextual relevance that will make search even more powerful. When that happens, attracting attention, getting asked to join the conversation, or finding anyone to listen will be even harder if someone’s not already looking for you. You want an invitation, attention and buzz? You’ll have to do more than learn the etiquette of social media. You’ll want to make sure that everything from your comments to your blog posts to your contests to your video not only adds value, but that it does so with the kind of cleverness and creativity that will make it stand out. True there’s no rule that says advertising agencies are better at that than anyone else, but the good ones have an impressive track record.
My prediction is this. CMOs, being overwhelmed as they are, will demand that their agencies offer all three capabilities: SEO, PR and big, creative social media ideas. And if they can’t get them in one place, they’ll definitely insist that their two or three agencies work as partners to maximize a brand’s investment. So here’s my advice, for what it’s worth. Let’s all focus on something positive. Instead of constructing an argument as to why other types of agencies are clueless, we should all prove that we’re not, by building our capabilities and our alliances.
Wha are your thoughts?
Related posts:
BL Ochman, How to pick your social media guru
Joseph Jaffe, Why charging a digital or PR agency with social media is a flawed
Bruce Nussbaum in Business Week, Are Big Ad Agencies So Clueless That Corporations Should Avoid Them?
Peter Young, Managing reputation: SEO vs PR
Comments
Great post and convo in the comments. A couple of thoughts...
I like the line - "successful social media programs call for all three: SEO, PR, and content worth remembering." Thing is, content worth "remembering" only gets you to second. And, clients aren't paying for doubles. Social media, from a marketing/ROI standpoint, is about content worth "evangelizing." And, that's a whole different threshold.
Jonathan Fields’s last blog post..Career Renegade on Fox [video]
Thanks all for some great comments. I think it's pretty obvious that social media, while it has some basic rules, is more difficult, time consuming, and involved than traditional. The measurement and metrics alone have yet to be defined clearly. The great social media programs/examples are few and far between (understandable given this is still relatively new) and while there is a lot of talent creating, experimenting and even pontificating, it's not as if there is one definitive expert with a foolproof set of instructions. But if you start with your audience: figure out what matters to them: how they want to engage; what kind of information they seek; to what degree they want to participate, socialize, search and solve themselves; then let them play a key role in all of the above, you're likely to succeed.
When I think about the exponential acceleration of change, with regard to the mediascape, it becomes clear that good, old-fashioned brand alignment is the mooring to which all vessels -- known and yet-to-be-known -- are anchored. As Edward and David suggest, above, the times they are a changin' yet again, and I suspect they're on performance enhancers.
MarketingProfs yesterday was the latest to recall the Did you know? video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpEnFwiqdx8) to our attention, and pointed out that it took radio 38 years to reach a market audience of 50M; television 13 years; the internet 4 years; iPod 3 years; and Facebook 2 years. This constantly-accelerating change requires all channel strategists and executors to remain grounded in sound marketing principles, and immersed in the organization's brand, regardless of the medium. Emboldened by that unifying core we can then assess new media opportunities as they emerge, and dream about how they might strengthen a given client's relationship with its audience.
One thing's for sure: What it is today is not what it will be tomorrow. However, brand alignment and creative execution will always be what separates the winners from those lost in the noise.
Glad to see my comment inspired your post and this lively conversation. Thanks for the shout out!
B.L. Ochmanu00e2u0080u0099s last blog post..How to Pick Your Social Media Guru
Let me tweak the back half of your quote about good and great work and simply apply it to social media. "...great (social media) tells you what a brand stands for and why you should share in its beliefs." - E. Boches
This fundamental truth is a powerful foundation from which to build a social media/integrated communication program - whether you're a PR firm, ad agency, or whatever.
Leo Bottaryu00e2u0080u0099s last blog post..Client Service And Team ClustrMaps
Great post and convo in the comments. A couple of thoughts...
I like the line - "successful social media programs call for all three: SEO, PR, and content worth remembering." Thing is, content worth "remembering" only gets you to second. And, clients aren't paying for doubles. Social media, from a marketing/ROI standpoint, is about content worth "evangelizing." And, that's a whole different threshold.
Jonathan Fieldsu00e2u0080u0099s last blog post..Career Renegade on Fox [video]
I completely agree. The future of marketing lies in our ability to merge all of these disparate disciplines into one uniform strategy toward a clearly defined goal. And in this time when digital consumer culture is transforming so rapidly, success will come to those agencies who can recognize marketing opportunities in this new space and integrate new, clever strategies that utilize these new tools. I don't doubt that many agencies are finding it difficult to keep up, but marketing has always been about finding your consumer in the most relevant media space and providing them with a reason to pay attention.
Yes, I think it will be important to learn quickly and find people to execute different aspects of a campaign knowledgeably. However, as proven by companies like Comcast who have proven impeccable customer service online and still have awful customer service via phone, I think that maintaining harmonious messaging will prove to be the most difficult task of companies who are taking the leap into social media. Because we need to remember that it is just another tool in the tool box and it needs to be used to build the same brand.
Ad agencies are clueless? I definitely think some are, but I wonder if the real issue is a mar/comm identity crisis? When youu00e2u0080u0099ve spent an entire career mastering market data, producing killer creative and placing media; seeking, listening and participating in social media conversations is fundamentally foreign and more than a little disruptive. Moving from brand monologue to dialogue requires a committed relationship that may (and probably should) extend beyond a given campaign, another potential disruption. Finally, fragmented audience and the need for microcustomization is a real challenge for creatives accustomed to marketing to the masses.
How do you solve this? First of all, stop being an Ad agency, a PR agency or a Direct Marketing agency. The future depends upon the successful merging of all of those disciplines, plus a smattering of CRM. Understanding an audience and providing them with content that provides context and drives conversations is the win here. Some of that content will be creative some informational. All of it should accrue to a comprehensive sense of brand identity and experience.
An agency that truly masters this transformation will have a role with their clients that is truly revolutionary, and some clients may decide to take on the core functions themselves. Ultimately, successfully mastering the new world of social media influence is a true partnership between clients, agencies and audiences.
Doug Winfieldu00e2u0080u0099s last blog post..Does advertising need more artists or better audience relationships?
Well done. You could not quote a more knowledgable person than BL Ochman. I so agree that we need to work together - agencies, blog professionals, social media experts (although that term is questionable because social media hasn't been around long enough for any of us to be 'expert' at it, truly)...
If we all recognize each others' abilities and talents, and give the client the best of what we bring to the table, everyone wins. IMHO
Yvonne DiVitau00e2u0080u0099s last blog post..Ignore the Names, Please Take Us Seriously. Please?
The impact of social media and relevant content is going to cause/force agencies to produce more impactful programs one way or another. And if they want to succeed, they need to keep up. It isn't about pushing a brand on people anymore, because they now have more power to speak their minds than ever before.
Anna Barcelosu00e2u0080u0099s last blog post..B2B Case Study: ShipServ
Great forward-looking assessment. To date, it's been relatively easy for companies who have jumped into social media to stand out, namely because most companies haven't. But, as you note, that will change.
It's the same thing we've seen with every other medium. The first companies to invest heavily in TV stood out like sore thumbs because there wasn't much noise. Now it's ridiculously difficult to create something for TV that breaks through and is memorable.
Social media won't be any different. One day in the near future, every brand that we demand interact with us in social media will be there to some extent. And the space will become crowded and loud. When that happens, and it already is beginning, the challenge won't be developing a smart strategy for brands to interact on twitter. It will be developing ideas that capture an attention span for longer than a micro-second.
Great insights, as usual.
David Mullenu00e2u0080u0099s last blog post..Should Brands Never Advertise in Social Media?
I think 'Content worth remembering' is becoming the apex of the triangle. We no longer sit passively in front of a focused media stream; newspaper, magazine, radio, or television - but are immersed in a flood of data where we can only snatch and grab trying to stay afloat. Great blog, hope some SEO and PR people read it.

[...] of blog comments, tweet and retweets. Mullen’s Chief Creative Officer, Edward Boches, wrote a great post on his creativity_unbound blog about the various ways ad agencies are clueless about social and [...]
[...] of blog comments, tweets and retweets. Mullen’s Chief Creative Officer, Edward Boches, wrote a great post on his creativity_unbound blog about the various ways ad agencies are clueless about social and [...]