Frenemies: The Epic Disruption of the Ad Business (and Everything Else)

Frenemies: The Epic Disruption of the Ad Business (and Everything Else) by Ken Auletta Page B

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Authors: Ken Auletta
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blog, and podcast for advertisers. Edelman is the largest privately owned public relations firm in the world. For clients like Samsung or Taco Bell they engage in online discussions with consumers on social networks or on the client’s Web site, or recruit influencers to engage consumers on various digital platforms. For the Dove Hair team, for example, CEO Richard Edelman says they created a variety of colorful, curly-haired Love Your Curls emojis, generating 414 million impressions on sites like Fashionista.com, HypeHair.com, MarieClaire.com, and SheSpeaks.com. With newspapers contracting or closing, he says, “We’re trying to find other channels because we can’t pitch to reporters anymore. We’re now dealing with Buzzfeed and Vice and Business Insider. They want sponsored or branded content. They want something funny, clever” to sneak past the defenses ofmillennials on guard against interruptive ads. To millennials, he is selling advertising, not news.
    But even with more work migrating to PR agencies or in-house for the creation and execution of big brand ideas, clients are still usually reliant on their agencies. While Mildenhall says “eighty percent of my content needs I do in-house,” he also says that his agency, TBWA\Chiat\Day, “gets eighty percent of my media budget.” His in-house creative revolves mostly around promotional materials and activities like designing corporate Web sites. Because speed counts, clients increasingly take in-house their blogging and tweeting and social network posts. What retards a client’s ability to do more of its own creative work is that creative executives don’t clamor to work for a single brand, as ad agency executives proclaim, because abundantly talented creatives don’t want to devote themselves to only one client. “The best people want to feel free to work for many clients and across many sectors,” Sorrell’s éminence grise Jeremy Bullmore says. Nevertheless, clients moving more work in-house poses an ongoing challenge to agencies.
    Another assault on agencies comes from publishing platforms performing the creative functions of ad agencies. This effort is fueled by native ads which can take the form of stories about a brand that appear in newspapers, magazines, or online and look like news stories; or compelling human interest stories in which the brand is barely mentioned. An impetus for these native ads came from the introduction of ad blockers, which imposed a nearly impregnable wall to block clearly labeled ads. Because they don’t appear to be ads, native tricks the ad-blocking software and, often, the consumer. Vice was a native pioneer when it went to Intel in 2013 and created an online Intel art exhibition that encouraged residents of certain areas to communicate with each other by joining, say, the Brooklyn Art Project. Publishing platforms sell the storytelling ability of the journalists they hire tocraft native ads, and bypass the agency to pitch clients directly. The New York Times may be shedding older journalists, but it had hired 110 copywriters and art directors (almost one third of its ad sales department) to create native ads for brands. Agencies desperate not to offend clients have little leverage to counter this new threat.
    To discuss the various threats to his agencies, Martin Sorrell leans forward on the wooden chair facing the small conference table cluttered with papers in his second-floor London office. He is not blind to these threats, and often speaks of the competition from digital and consulting and PR and publishing platforms. If anything, his constant travels and attendance at conferences and meetings with an array of frenemies make him unusually aware of potential threats to his business. Of the threat posed by platforms serving as agencies, he notes that WPP has partial ownership stakes in some of these potential competitors, including Vice. “Just think about our strategy: It’s to get the Don Draper companies—the

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