Ever since the venerable ad agency first moved into its midtown Toronto office location in the mid-80s, its name had been emblazoned in big, bold lettering atop the building.

But after recent successive years of plummeting revenues and staff cutbacks, the agency no longer qualified as the building's anchor tenant. So, one Saturday last year, its iconic sign was ignominiously hauled down and replaced with that of an insurance company.

At one time, this agency was one of the largest and most prestigious in the country. Its sharp decline had nothing to do with the quality of its creative work—in fact, it continues to produce award-winning ads—rather, it was due more to the deplorable state of the business. All traditional agencies are suffering—some more so than others, particularly if they've been slow to recognize that the industry is at a crossroads.

Ad spending is in the doldrums, with no sign of a revival anytime soon. According to Ad Age, the industry barely showed a pulse in 2002 after negative growth the previous year.

Marketing budgets everywhere are being slashed. And, unlike the past, when ad spending could be counted on to rebound with the economy, the cuts this time are permanent. More than at anytime, ad expenditures are under grave scrutiny by skeptical senior management. In a recent Ad Age poll, 70% of marketers admitted that ROI accountability “represents a long-term change in how they do business.”

Under threat of further budget cuts, marketers are crying out for help. How can they do more with less? What mix of channels will deliver the highest return? How can they prove the effectiveness of multimedia campaigns?

Faced with an almost unrecognizable consumer environment rapidly mutating before their eyes, they now realize the answers lie outside the customary 4Ps. Unsure of themselves, marketers are more open to experimentation with contemporary formulas suited to a digital age.

The problem is, they can't rely on their general agencies to serve up much more than the usual bromides—or even to offer impartial advice. As much as agencies like to depict themselves as being media neutral, their natural bias is toward TV, where they have historically reeled in the biggest dollars.

At a recent forum on the crisis in advertising, Jay Bertram, President of TBWA/Toronto, tartly observed, “Agencies are incredibly ignorant and disrespectful of other disciplines,” hurriedly adding, “We are no longer an advertising agency.”

End of the Analog Era

Even the biggest ad spenders are disenchanted with the state of advertising. Last June, General Motors Executive Director of Advertising C.J. Fraleigh—who controls a profligate $3 billion budget—publicly scolded agencies for not providing solutions that sell product, calling them “soft and flabby.”

He warned, “If you're not in that camp—and I would say, most agencies and most media companies are not—then you have to get there. You have to get there because that's where the dollars are going…lots of dollars at GM, and we are just one client.”

His scalding observations were endorsed by GM Vice Chairman Robert Lutz, who went so far as to muse about the effectiveness of TV auto ads.

Despite the dire implications of those remarks, the large agencies remain stubbornly reluctant to give up on commercial TV, even as other major advertisers, such as P&G and Unilever, join GM in pulling back from the medium, no longer seeing the automatic impact on sales they once took for granted.

That's because audiences appear to be “deserting television in droves,” according to the New York Times (October 22, 2003). The Nielsen ratings for this year's prime-time television season have shown a shocking drop from the past—as much as 20% in the all-important 18-24 male demographic group—leaving network executives baffled. One is quoted as saying the situation “strains credulity.” Another confesses, “No one knows what's going on.”

What's going on is that consumers, fed up with free TV, have found other digital distractions to inform or amuse them (e.g., pay-per-view, video games, DVDs, the Internet). Even among TV watchers, only about one-third still pay attention to commercials anymore (according to a Forrester media and marketing survey).

And a fast-growing population of PVR owners are gleefully “ad-skipping” when they watch their recorded programs—a trend that puts TV's future in doubt as a mass medium. As Wired magazine points out (October 2003), “the revolution that started in analog is now exploding in digital, and suddenly everything about television is up for grabs—the way we watch it and the ads that pay for it, the kinds of programs we get and the future of the networks that carry them.”

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Stephen Shaw is vice-president of strategic services with The Kenna Group, a full-service customer relationship management company. He can be reached at 905-361-4046 or via email: sshaw@thekennagroup.com.