Like personal relationships, your client-agency partnership depends on open lines of communication. Even a relationship that starts on the rosiest of notes will quickly fizzle without regular contact.

Poor communication in marketing also can lead to missed opportunities and cost you some serious money. And no matter whether the client or agency drops the ball, the result is ineffective service.

After all, how is an agency supposed to deliver positive results when it doesn't take the time to understand your company? And how are you supposed to get what you want if you aren't transparent and don't share valuable information?

If communication is limited, there's no real value in the relationship—period.

Here are five reasons why communication issues arise and how you, as the client, can eliminate them from your future partnerships.

1. There's little trust

A whopping 98% of clients and agencies consider trust a cornerstone of their relationship, according to a survey by RPA and USA Today.

Moreover, the survey results revealed a deep disconnect between belief and acuity: Nearly 90% of clients maintain they freely express their thoughts, but less than 40% of agency partners concur. And though 90% of agencies think they know their clients' business, just 65% of clients hold the same opinion.

When Tim Leake, senior vice-president of growth and innovation at RPA, went from working on the agency side to working as a third-party consultant, he noticed something startling: "Clients said things to me they never said when I was working agency side. Over lunch, a client once said to me, 'Honestly, I simply don't trust any of my agencies to actually solve my marketing problems.' That got me wondering, 'What else aren't they saying out loud?'"

As the client, you need to be able to trust your agency partner to cultivate a productive relationship. Building trust begins with frequent contact—when things are going well and especially when they're going south. Once communication starts to dissolve, your trust will fade, and an effective campaign will lose its luster.

Having worked on both the client and agency sides, I can tell you that relationships work best when you are transparent and working toward the same goals. After all, you both want to succeed.

2. There's no unity

When you and your agency aren't on the same page in terms of goals and methods, it becomes impossible to produce positive results. A lack of unification leads to misaligned objectives, rendering the entire campaign useless.

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Five Reasons Your Client-Agency Communications (and Relationship) Are Breaking Down

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Sarah Clark

Sarah Clark is the president of Mitchell Communications Group, an award-winning PR firm that creates real conversations among people, businesses, and brands.

LinkedIn: Sarah Clark