Moving your firm beyond high touch to high tech
Time to bring IT out of the back room and put it to work for clients
Exceptional client service is key to agency success, but the truth is that most agencies deliver it. That’s one of the reasons our business is called “professional services.” Your firm undoubtedly ranks high in “high touch.” But are you fully leveraging technology to help improve the operations of your firm? Are you truly “high tech,” or are you mostly just mirroring what most firms do? Is your agency deep into the digital stream, or mostly standing on the edges?
Maximizing technology to increase agency effectiveness
Because agencies are populated with knowledge workers, not manual laborers, agency executives assume that increased productivity can only come from making people work harder. But there’s much more that marketing communications firms can do to improve both efficiency and effectiveness, and it starts with making much more aggressive use of technology.
In the enlightening book Reinvent Your Enterprise, consultant Jack Bergstrand asks:
“Does it take your company a couple of weeks just to set up a meeting? If so, you are either in trouble or headed toward it. If your enterprise can’t improve its knowledge work productivity, your firm’s best years are behind it.”
In most firms, “Information Technology” is mostly about making sure people have working hardware, access to the network, and reasonably current versions of basic operating systems and software. But increasingly, clients expect their agencies to be using technology to maximize value in the relationships. We now see questions in RFPs like this one:
“What web-based tools or systems do you use to create operating efficiencies, manage costs, or service your clients?”
Technology essentials for agencies
Unfortunately the only technology most agencies use with their clients is email. Sure, email is easy, but it’s a horribly ineffective way of communicating and collaborating with clients. The essential job of IT in an agency is to equip the firm with proven technology solutions for:
Project management: Abolishing the traditional job jacket and using a software platform (like Advantage or Workamajig) not only to move work through the system, but to attach and catalog all relevant digital assets, including creative briefs, copy, art elements, and even finished production files.
Presentation: Attaching a PDF to an email is an exceptionally poor way for an agency to present and sell its work. Instead, progressive firms are using real-time presentation and communication services such as WebEx, Fuze Meeting, or ConceptShare.
Collaboration: The state-of-the-art way to collaborate with clients is using online services such as Basecamp or Workzone which serve as “virtual offices.” All correspondence and relevant files are cataloged, organized, and instantly accessible online.
The benefits of making this upfront investment of time and money will be immediately apparent. Art directors will no longer have to waste an hour looking for a file (a complaint Ignition hears often). Clients will no longer have to call and ask you to “please email that file again.” And your batting average for getting good work approved will go up, leading to fewer do-overs. Even revisions are likely to decline as a result of better communication and more accurate version control of files.
Procter & Gamble’s new CEO Bob McDonald keeps no paper files. He wants to fully digitize P&G, and to the extent possible, its marketing. Would you rather be following your clients or leading them?
