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- <text id=91TT1501>
- <title>
- July 08, 1991: Marketing:Feeling a Little Jumpy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 08, 1991 Who Are We?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 42
- MARKETING
- Feeling a Little Jumpy
- </hdr><body>
- <p>More fickle than ever, advertisers are quitting their agencies
- in search of sharper ideas and better deals. Result: fear on
- Madison Avenue.
- </p>
- <p>By Janice Castro--With reporting by Mary Cronin/New York and
- William McWhirter/Detroit
- </p>
- <p> Avis believes everybody should try harder. When it
- decided earlier this year that it might want to hire a new
- advertising firm to handle its $35 million account, the company
- considered virtually every major agency in the phone book--100
- of them--for the job. Once Avis chose six finalists, the
- agencies poured their energy into the project. Researchers made
- studies of consumer driving trends. Copywriters crafted catchy
- new slogans. Creative teams worked up lavish demonstrations of
- their talent with music, art, sample ads and commercials. Last
- week Avis announced that after examining the industry's best
- efforts, it had chosen the work of New York City's Backer
- Spielvogel Bates--the very agency it had been thinking of
- dumping. Why go to all the trouble? Said a disappointed Bill
- Tragos, chief executive of TBWA Advertising, which competed for
- the account: "Maybe they were looking for a way to wake Backer
- up. Sometimes clients do those horrible things and make the rest
- of us jump through hoops."
- </p>
- <p> Like Broadway dancers and Hollywood hopefuls, even the
- largest advertising agencies these days are submitting to the
- grueling and humiliating auditions known in the industry as
- account reviews. Backer, the longtime imagemaker for Campbell
- Soups and other major brands, beat long odds: 85% to 90% of
- agencies called on the carpet for their work in such reviews
- lose the account.
- </p>
- <p> At a time when advertising firms are struggling through
- the third year of the worst slump to hit the industry in more
- than a dec ade, account reviews have become a harrowing aspect
- of business as usual, one that some agency people call the
- "dance of death." Observes Frank Stanton, the former chairman
- of Simmons Market Research Bureau: "Pandemonium is a good word
- to describe the business now." Shaken by the instability in the
- industry, many agencies are only making the problem worse by
- retreating to ideas that seem safe--but that may bore
- consumers and further alienate clients.
- </p>
- <p> Since last July, more than $800 million worth of
- advertising work has moved from one agency to another. (The size
- of an account is measured by the client's annual ad spending,
- on which the agency earns a percentage commission.) A few days
- before the Avis decision, Eastman Kodak shifted the lucrative
- media-buying responsibility for placing some $55 million worth
- of its ads to the Lintas agency, a contract probably worth at
- least $1 million in fees. The loser: J. Walter Thompson, which
- has been creating Kodak's advertising for 61 years, most
- recently its "True Colors" campaign. "It came as a complete
- surprise to us," said the sobered JWT chairman, Burt Manning.
- "I still don't know what happened." Among the advertisers
- currently working the crowd for a possible new image: American
- Express (billings at stake: $60 million), Michelob ($35 to $40
- million), Weight Watchers ($30 million) and--appropriately
- enough--Maalox ($15 million).
- </p>
- <p> Agency executives can be forgiven if they jump every time
- the phone rings these days. At any moment, an enviable client
- may invite a pitch or a major chunk of their business may walk
- out. When New York's N W Ayer celebrated its victory last week
- in capturing the $30 million Bayer aspirin account, the agency
- was still smarting from the loss two weeks earlier of the $65
- million J.C. Penney account. Advertisers are flexing their
- spending muscle more aggressively than ever before. Even
- longtime clients feel little loyalty anymore to their agencies.
- As a result, ad firms are raising the stakes too, regularly
- raiding one another for business, and everyone is feeling the
- strain. Says Jerry Siano, chairman of the N W Ayer agency: "We
- are pitching more accounts than ever now."
- </p>
- <p> Senior industry executives say the brisk pace of account
- shuffling is only the surface activity of a more violently
- churning business climate. Behind the scenes, they say, far more
- accounts are teetering in the balance as clients conduct tough,
- private "internal reviews," confronting their agencies with
- threats to replace them. Some clients seem fickle as well,
- bouncing like bungee jumpers from agency to agency. A little
- more than a year ago, a dissatisfied Reebok moved its account
- from California-based Chiat/Day/Mojo to Boston's Hill, Holliday,
- Connors & Cosmopulos. But last March the athletic-shoe maker
- left the Boston agency and gave part of the $40 million account
- back to Chiat, which has produced such memorable ideas as the
- Eveready Energizer Bunny and Nissan's fantasy drives, in which
- a young man dreams of Christie Brinkley coming along for the
- ride.
- </p>
- <p> In the freezing blast that is hitting the industry, the
- economic recession that began last summer represents the
- "wind-chill factor," says Young & Rubicam chairman Peter
- Georgescu. Ad spending, which rose only 2.4% last year, to
- $128.6 billion, is expected to increase just 3.1% this year,
- according to McCann-Erickson's Robert Coen, the industry's
- leading forecaster. In order to cut costs and ride out the
- slump, Madison Avenue has trimmed hundreds of professionals from
- its ranks during the past year--and the cutbacks are far from
- over.
- </p>
- <p> Conditions grew grim for agencies during the gulf war.
- Advertisers slashed spending sharply, in part because they were
- worried that commercial interruptions of combat coverage would
- offend American consumers. Since that feeling was so widespread
- among U.S. companies, many firms also viewed the period as one
- in which they could safely cut advertising budgets, confident
- that their competitors would do the same thing rather than take
- advantage of the quiet marketplace.
- </p>
- <p> Now that companies are eager to renew their marketing
- efforts, though, they are taking a hard look at the tone and
- effectiveness of their ads. Many are concluding that the pitches
- that worked last year will fall on deaf ears. The white-hot
- decade of conspicuous consumption has cooled. Many accounts are
- in review because advertisers are casting a wide net in the
- agency business, searching for new ideas about how to reach
- consumers who are rejecting trendiness for practicality.
- </p>
- <p> Take Subaru. After more than 15 years with the New York
- agency Levine, Huntley, Vick & Beaver, Subaru of America in June
- awarded its $60 million account to Wieden & Kennedy, the hot
- shop in Portland, Ore., that handles Nike's ads. Subaru hopes
- the right ad campaign will help boost U.S. sales from last
- year's 108,000 to as many as 150,000 in 1992. Said Chris
- Wackman, Subaru vice president of marketing: "Consumers are
- looking for qualities like safety, affordability and rugged
- performance, all of the things that Subaru represents. We've
- always been called bulletproof. If we can find a way to
- communicate that to more consumers, we think we are poised for
- a real good decade."
- </p>
- <p> Beyond concerns about the tone and methodology of
- advertising, though, is a far more profound shift in the
- industry balance of power, from the sellers (agencies) to the
- buyers (clients). Vast changes in entertainment and other
- technologies since the mid-1970s have fundamentally transformed
- the task of delivering ad messages to U.S. consumers. The
- explosive growth of cable, specialized publications and other
- media has helped splinter the mass market into thousands of
- audience shards, scattering consumer attention in all
- directions.
- </p>
- <p> That search has raised the cost and frequency of
- advertising. On TV, more than 900 commercials interrupt network
- programming every day, up from 814 in 1987, according to the
- Television Bureau of Advertising's Arbitron data. Despite the
- current plateau in ad spending, U.S. companies have doubled
- their outlays, from $63 billion in 1984 to last year's $129
- billion. At the same time, the great array of new products
- flooding the American marketplace has made it harder for
- individual brands to distinguish themselves from the pack.
- </p>
- <p> Computer advances that enable companies to gather vast
- amounts of consumer data have helped advertisers track down
- their targets. Marketing firms can now identify the customers
- most likely to buy a particular product, tailor advertising
- content for them and even track which ads actually lead to a
- purchase. More and more, advertisers are pressing agencies to
- prove that their ads deliver customers and market share.
- </p>
- <p> Clients have become much smarter shoppers in other ways
- too. General Motors now has an ad czar, Philip Guarascio, who
- controls an estimated $900 million corporate marketing and
- advertising budget. By negotiating huge coordinated media buys
- for all GM divisions as well as multi-year deals at discounts,
- he is saving the company about $100 million annually. Guarascio
- insists, though, that effectiveness, not necessarily price
- alone, is his first consideration. Says he: "The most important
- aspect of an agency's performance is to create ideas for us that
- build business."
- </p>
- <p> Agencies are scurrying to meet the new demands made by
- haggling clients. Last December the New York agency Avrett, Free
- & Ginsberg won the $45 million TWA account by offering to work
- for a 5% commission on the business, roughly half the going
- rate. This month Sean Fitzpatrick, McCann-Erickson's chief
- creative officer for North America, will move from New York City
- to Detroit in order to keep a closer watch over his agency's
- $500 million account with GM.
- </p>
- <p> Author Martin Mayer, in his new book, Whatever Happened to
- Madison Avenue?, describes how the agencies have been stripped
- of their power and influence. "What has been devastating the
- advertising industry," he writes, "is the growing feeling among
- advertisers and retailers that the selling job should be done
- predictably through the weight of money rather than
- speculatively through the employment of imagination." As a
- result, Mayer has said, agencies are in danger of turning into
- little more than "vendors competing on price." Stanton of
- Simmons Research agrees: "Agencies are being used like travel
- agents, who work to get the client the cheapest flight and get
- paid less for their pains."
- </p>
- <p> Most agency chiefs, though, take issue with that grim
- view. Says Leo Burnett chairman Hal ("Cap") Adams: "It still
- comes down to the impact and value of ideas. Good ideas will
- attract support, and really good ideas are irresistible."
- </p>
- <p> That is certainly true; but there have been too few of
- those good ideas around lately. Advertising Age, the industry's
- leading journal, was so disturbed by the quality of Madison
- Avenue's work during the past year that in March it declined to
- award its vaunted "Agency of the Year" prize for the first time
- since it began the practice in 1973. Said the editors: "While
- there was a goodly amount of clever recycling around, conceptual
- innovations were in short supply." Ad Age concluded, probably
- correctly, that the main reason for the relative dullness of
- recent work by agencies was that clients had been harassing them
- so much during a tough business cycle. The good news: as the
- economy begins to improve, both clients and agencies will be
- under less suffocating pressure.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the stampede of account switching has put a
- premium on the industry's creative talent. Gordon Bowen, a top
- creative executive at Ogilvy & Mather, hardly raised an eyebrow
- last week when six dozen roses were delivered to him as he ate
- breakfast in a Manhattan restaurant. Rival agency
- McCann-Erickson sent the bouquet as part of its campaign to
- persuade him to switch shops. As the principal executive on the
- restless American Express account, Bowen conceivably could leave
- home with the business. If that were to happen, $300 worth of
- roses would go down in advertising history as one very creative
- and cost-effective idea.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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