Noisy Thinking: Business Bites Back

Last night at Fallon, the APG convened for some more Noisy Thinking about the present and future of planning.

 

This time it was the turn of clients past, present and future to chare their views on the state of the discipline and the challenges facing Planners….

 

Andy Fennell, Group Marketing Director of Diageo; Mark Lund, Partner at NOW and former CEO of COI; Alison Hardy, owner of Headstrong Thinking and former Director of Marketing Services at Doctor Foster:  DOH shared insights and provocations

 

Andy kicked off, reflecting initially on the ever more complex state of marketing and communication, with a proliferation of media and markets to deal with nowadays.  His view of planning and planners was simple – be insightful, action focussed drivers of growth.  Our role is to create change and for all our cleverness and intellect, if we can’t affect change then our ideas and our role are worthless.  Our role is to focus creative endeavour and our obsession is simplicity.  The kind of planners he’s looking for are partners, team members, owning the business outcome.  The last thing he wants is a consultant.  If you can’t synthesise all your cleverness into a remarkably simple idea expressed in ordinary language, then you will simply be tolerated and ultimately ignored.

 

Inspired by Andy’s tales of simplicity and business focussed and chilled by the prospect of noisy irrelevance, we welcomed Alison to share her views.

 

As an agency planner turned client at the UK’s biggest employer (the NHS, 1.4 million people!), Alison had a unique perspective.  We all indulge in the fantasies she describes, where the agency, and the planner is the centre of the clients’ life, hanging on our every utterance.  Of course it’s nothing like that.  Clients are busy, distracted and managing a vast number of relationships – in her time at the DoH, Alison was dealing, on a weekly retained basis, with 19 different agencies, of one discipline or another.  As she put it – you don’t manage the client, the client manages you.  Very few agencies and very few people count in this world.  Only 3 or 4 of those 19 agencies were really close to her and very few individuals in these agencies stood out.  The challenge for planning is to be the voice of insight and clarity in the crowd; to understand the clients’ business and make a difference to it.  Planners’ habit of always looking to find a new challenge and tiring of routine can militate against this, as ultimately the only thing that matters in an agency is the individuals, and planners allow themselves to be moved around too much to matter in the long run.

 

Alison’s focus on closeness reminded us all that for planning to be effective, it is a relationship discipline.  Mark Lund was up next.

 

Speaking as a serial founder of agencies and a manager of one of the biggest agency rosters in recent history during his time at the COI, Mark was broad in his references and realistic in his assessment.  Marketing clients are under more pressure than they have ever been, needing to interpret a colossally complex world and deliver results fast.  The planners role is to help the client interpret this world and light the way ahead.  Our duty must be to the ultimate business outcome.  He shared some helpful archetypes to illustrate the future – would you be Gandalf, drawing on wisdom and experience to create the right outcome?  Or would you be the Benedict Cumberbatch Sherlock of 2012, the young, quick witted observer, able to see what others have not seen and draw swift and insightful conclusions.  He left us with the image of the great planner as the gymnast on a bar, able to perform dazzling somersaults, but always land on a slender, solid foundation of truth.

 

The evening wore on into questions as we discussed what consumer ownership of brands might mean for all this (get over it, the consumer has always owned your brand, it’s just more visible now); whether the planners’ primary responsibility is to the client or the creative department (it’s all about the business outcome, remember?); and whether planning can thrive as an independent specialist discipline (planning is one player on a team, as an independent voice, the question is what will you do with all those clever charts?).  The assembled masses tumbled out into the bright lights of Oxford Circus provoked, inspired and ready to go again in a couple of months when we will debate the effect that global planning has on all this.

 

Thanks to Fallon for hosting such a stimulating event and to our sponsors, Flamingo

 

Craig Mawdsley APG Chair, Joint Head of Planning AMVBBDO

What Happened when Worlds Collided

Here are the four presentations and the Q&A:
Jeremy Gilley
General Sir Mike Jackson
David Droga
Alastair Campbell
Worlds Collide Q&A

The South Bank was humming on Wednesday 2nd May as the APG packed the Purcell Room to the gills with Planners and thinkers ready to watch the colliding worlds of politics, the military, peace activism and creativity do strategic battle:  ’What do you do to win, when you can’t afford to lose?’

There was no doubt about the theme – it was all strategies for winning.  But the nuance was all in the different and fascinating approaches taken by our heroic debaters:  Alastair Campbell, General Sir Mike Jackson, Jeremy Gilley and David Droga.  If ever you wanted to be pulled up by your strategic bootstraps, this was the event to be at.

You could pick and choose between the brilliantly simple analytical frameworks of the General (who also uttered one of the memorable truths of the afternoon – strategy is an over used word and an under-used, and really demanding skill…) the passion and sheer personal drive to succeed (whilst begin willing to fail and keep going) of the messianic Jeremy Gilley; the absolute strategic rigour, extraordinary insights and magnetic charm of Alastair Campbell and the simplicity and quasi religious sense of purpose of David Droga (‘most advertising is pollution..’).

The audience were invited to choose whose strategic world they wanted to occupy – in the sense that they got from them insights they would steal for use  in their job the next day…..It was invidious to make them choose as all the speakers had such profoundly interesting insights and advice on offer – But Campbell won by whisker.  The General wasn’t happy….Unofficial motto of the army…..Don’t come second….

The event was live streamed by the Guardian and the video of the whole afternoon, with all the speeches and summations and questions, can be viewed through the linke above. You can’t afford not to watch it.

Finally – thanks once again to our generous sponsor and partners:  Clear Channel, the Marketing Society, the Guardian.  We are proud to be associated with you.

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Worlds Collide- Matthew Dearden Weighs In

 Hours before our speakers take the stage, Matthew Dearden from our sponsor Clear Channel weighs in on strategic thinking….

At the heart of all great, effective campaigns is powerful, brave thinking. This inspires and guides the creative and media choices that enable brands to engage with people: building the relationships between consumers and their brands that ultimately deliver commercial results.

 

Our belief in this power of advertising is fundamental to all we do at Clear Channel. We give brands the opportunity to engage with the right audience for them, large or small, tightly targeted or broadcast widely. By being flexible in meeting the needs of each campaign, and embracing new approaches, we work in partnership with agencies and their clients to unleash campaign results that make us all proud.

 

Out of home has always been a powerful medium. This is now being amplified by a new wave of insightful, creative and data-driven planning; and harnessing technology in the creative. The result is new opportunities, and also competitive threats, for planners. Emma Newman, Clear Channel’s Marketing Director, illuminates these below.

 

Fuelled by our belief in the power of planning we have for many years run the Outdoor Planning Awards. We are now delighted to extend our investment in planning by partnering with APG to make “Worlds Collide” possible. The event is set to be an invigorating, thought-provoking landmark; we look forward to savouring it with you.

 What do you do to win, when you can’t afford to lose?

With such pre-eminent speakers sharing their thoughts and strategies, Worlds Collide looks as though it’s going to be nothing short of inspirational.  I am very much looking forward to hearing the speaker’s views and can only assume that planning will play a huge part.

One of the most important aspects of developing strong ways of winning is the planning process. We’ve all heard the expression ‘It’s all in the planning’ and it is certainly true, never more so than when developing a robust advertising campaign.  Great planning is at the heart of all successful campaigns where the desired outcomes are crystal clear from the outset and the strategies to achieve those outcomes are planned with both courage and precision.

In today’s climate of reduced budgets, fewer resources and the potential of an ever evolving technology landscape, the role of the planner is more pressurised than ever.  Great planners need to be able to cover all aspects of the media mix to capitalise on the endless opportunities. Strategic message creation and dissemination are critical to get right.

Happy consumers become brand ambassadors and unofficial powerful marketers, particularly with the use of social media.  They are demanding more from the brands they interact with, no longer satisfied with one-way communication; the need for deeper interaction through creativity, social media and personal expression is becoming the norm. 

Brands that publicly push boundaries inspire consumer confidence and build brand loyalty.  We’ve experienced this step-change first hand at Clear Channel with 2011 being the year of exponential growth in technology-enabled advertising being used by clients and agencies, including the recent appearance of the UK’s first motion recognition campaigns.  

Indeed for Clear Channel, the simple truth of strategic planning has been taken one step further.  We believe so strongly that the evolving role of outdoor is transforming within the planning stage that we joined forces with Brand Republic and created the annual Outdoor Planning Awards.  Now in their sixth year, the Awards reward campaigns that push the boundaries of media planning to deliver demonstrable effectiveness and results.  Our belief in this fundamental truth of great planning leading to great campaigns is why we’re proud to be associated with the APG and this event.

What do you do to win, when you can’t afford to lose? To me this is all about strategically planning so you can’t lose!  Robust strategies as we know are tough to develop however, with the right people, the right products and the right positioning, losing is out of the question. Despite the explosion in channels and technologies available to planners today the dissemination of great communications will always come down to great planning.

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