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28 Replies Last post: Jul 17, 2008 3:08 PM by Iwrite

Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet.

Jul 1, 2008 2:01 PM

Click to view Iwrite's profile Mogul Iwrite 1,093 posts since
Dec 29, 2007
I was talking to an art director I work with on a couple of projects and he asked me, "why don't you have your site up yet?"

"Don't need one, how many clients or projects have you gotten from your website?" I reply.

"Well, none yet. But you've got to have a website," he comes back.

"Why?" I ask, "if you aren't getting any business from your site, why do you 'have" to have one?"

I thought his head was going to explode, so I let him off the hook.

"Look, what do you tell clients about designing a website? That they only get one opportunity to make a first impression. Well, as busy as I am I haven't had the time to design a website that I would put my name on. I know what I want it to be and I am not settling for anything less. That's what we tell clients all the time - never settle. Shouldn't we follow our own advice?"

I have his head nodding, so I continue...

"What would happen after I have met with a potential client and presented my portfolio of all the beautiful work that I have done, talked to him or her about helping them grow their business with smart and innovative solutions that work, and then I leave them with a business card, some samples, a leave behind gift that is really nice. And after I am gone, they go to a website I have put up that does not reflect or meet the quality that I have just spent time personally conveying to them. What will they think if they see a crappy website? Be honest. What would you think?" I press.

The light comes on. "I would think something isn't right here. This can't be the website for the person I just met with," he says, "Oh, my God!! I've got to take my website down!"

We both laugh. Later that day, his website is down. He has a placemat up that explains why there is no site. It conveys a message of pride in the quality of the work he produces, it shares his passion for great design. Any he hasn't lost a client. Imagine that. In fact, he has pick up a couple more.

He is not too happy with me, he had that bad website up for months before this discussion, but it is hard to tell someone their baby is ugly.

I have been asked why I don't have up a website, and I tell people - until I can create something that accurately reflects my passion and drive, I don't need one. Clients for advertising agencies do not come through websites, advertising is about relationships. I explain my passion, I communicate my drive and thinking, but most of all I practice what I preach - I do not produce crap, I don't compromise on what I think is best for my clients. My standards are not negotiable.

The image you put forth is everything. What does the look and feel of your marketing say about your business? High end items should not have cheap looking marketing, that's why jewelry comes in those really nice boxes.

What does your marketing say?

I think I have said this before but I felt like it needed to be said again - I needed to hear it anyway.
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Click to view Lighthouse24's profile Mogul Lighthouse24 2,396 posts since
Oct 10, 2007
1. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 1, 2008 2:08 PM
I was wondering about that . . .
Click to view Iwrite's profile Mogul Iwrite 1,093 posts since
Dec 29, 2007
2. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 1, 2008 3:01 PM
in response to: Lighthouse24
Me too, I can't take time away from projects that I am working on to work on my materials. One of the pitfalls of trying to work full-time while building your business. I am working on a splash page. Also, it is like having a doctor for a patient or a lawyer for a client - I am trying not to but I am a bad client because of what I know.
Click to view Iwrite's profile Mogul Iwrite 1,093 posts since
Dec 29, 2007
3. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 2, 2008 3:55 PM
in response to: Iwrite
My apologies, there was a question buried in this rambling:

What does your marketing look like?

While I am at it:

Does it really matter what your marketing looks like for the business you are running, will people buy what you are offering no matter what?

Can really nice marketing materials help with funding issues?

Yes, they are loaded questions but I am trying to spark a discussion.
Click to view Lighthouse24's profile Mogul Lighthouse24 2,396 posts since
Oct 10, 2007
4. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 2, 2008 7:26 PM
in response to: Iwrite
Iwrite, I don't think my core business (management consulting) is representative of most business operations in this community, but here are my answers to your questions just the same:

My marketing usually looks like (and is) a proposal. New business "leads" always arrive in one of two ways: (1) a formal RFP (Request for Proposal) to provide a specific program or service, or (2) an email inquiry that asks something like, "Can you do this for us, and if so, how much would it cost?" So I'm already on someone's "short list" when they first see any "marketing" materials that I have control over -- and sure, a professionally-written and nicely-packaged proposal definitely has a positive influence on the buying decision (and on funding within that context).

Being on someone's "short list" means they've already decided that I might be the right person to help them get where they're trying to go before we've ever met. I'm convinced that most business owners and managers make that decision based on credible evidence, not on a consultant's marketing or advertising pieces. So I try to provide a lot of credible evidence in a wide variety of mediums (including participation in communities like this).

I very rarely have control over how the final product "looks" in any of those mediums, so my focus has to be on the content. I try to be informative, relevant, and accurate. I do think it matters (I don't believe that people would bother to contact me or consider that I might be able to help their business if all I shared with the world were a bunch of canned responses, recycled blogs, 20-year-old "how-to" articles, or erroneous or misleading advice). That's a point you've made in other posts -- for someone providing professional services, what you actually DO tends to speak a lot louder than what your marketing folks SAY you do.

As for my websites, they were designed to enable communication and collaboration (internally and with clients), and to provide a way for people to find me and get in contact. They aren't there to move product out the door.

As I said, not the typical model. I wouldn't have posted this, except you're in a professional services field, too -- so it seemed applicable.
Click to view Iwrite's profile Mogul Iwrite 1,093 posts since
Dec 29, 2007
5. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 3, 2008 9:30 AM
in response to: Lighthouse24
Lighthouse, thank you.

You make some great points. I really believe your comment about being on someone's short list applies to every business - we should all want to be one the short list when it comes to a customers buying decisions, no matter what we are selling.

Your point about being credible and a source of helpful information is dead on also. Even if you are not in a professional service business, being this source can help any business. For you and I, it is the foundation of our businesses, but for someone making puzzles or selling pizzas or creating jewelry it is about establishing a relationship with customers by providing more than a physical product. That is a great insight that a lot of us can use.

Thanks!
Click to view snipperred's profile Mogul snipperred 147 posts since
Jun 11, 2008
6. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 3, 2008 1:35 PM
Hi there Iwrite and Lighthouse. Thanks for the stimulating conversation.

I agree you should do what is appropriate and what works for your market. Showing your ability by taking exception to conventions is one way to set yourself apart. I can tell from your post I already like your style! I happen to be a bit outside the box, so let me offer some counterpoints for the discussion.

If you can do an incredible website that shows your quality, then you should. Saying that you choose not to do something will not impress everyone. I share many of your standards and hold to a maxim of "Those who can...do." I assume you are in a position to want more business because you have some clients and work full-time.

I imagine you intend to be a creative/ functional director to your site but will require specialist help for the quality application you require. Hopefully you can find that specialist to work with you to the same standard of excellence you provide to your own clients. A RFP placed into a handful of strategic forums might yield quotes, work samples, and reference to ...websites!

Perhaps you are stuck in one of those closed loops like you need credit to make credit. However, if you are already amassing clientelle and results that speak for themselves, then you have got the lifeblood of your business down. So the questions are:

How much will it cost you to get the specialized service you probably need and/or take the time to produce your site? What ROI can you project with a site that sets you apart from the competitive online market?

I think the question that brought you to your reaffirmation (you are bettter of without a run of the mill site) is worth scrutinization in itself. It represents a market sample and hints at just how close the internet markets are to your business. The great things about internet advertising have to be niche distinction, local social/ geographic limitation bypass, and connection to clients who are proactive with/ believe in the medium.

So...I guess we wonder if we are special enough, can we do business online, and can we do more business whether locally or remotely by engaging an internet audience- i.e. how much business is going to services such as yours through web traffic?

Personally speaking, the risks/ rewards make sense for me. I have done some extensive research to find services comparable to my own "in development". Dissappointingly, what I usually find out there is run of the mill and easily disqualifiable in my opinion- like I think you are saying. The good news is that represents an opportunity- for the time being at least! What sets people apart to me so far is anything that actually convinces me they are actually doing the work to the satisfaction of real clients, demonstrate their expertise by way of their site design and engagement with the online community, and are successful enough at what they do to be able to afford to do so.

Based on your involvement in this forum, your intelligent commentary, and accepting a premise your business is being conducted and is that good...sounds like a good website could only improve upon your success. Your current way of doing business will be a major compliment to any website you produce and should be incorporated in the design whenever you decide you can move forward on it. I look forward to taking a look at who you are and what you can do.

Thanks again for the intriguing discussion. Your approaches validates some of my own shared views.

Click to view Iwrite's profile Mogul Iwrite 1,093 posts since
Dec 29, 2007
7. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 3, 2008 3:07 PM
in response to: snipperred
Welcome to the conversation. Wow. Let's see if I can get this response right:

First , I believe in interactive advertising, like I believe in all other forms of advertising - it is what I do. I will have a site up, but it will not compromise my standards for what I think a site should be. However, I recognize that for the clients I am trying to go after, a website is not the deciding factor. The same is true for most advertising agencies - they get clients through contacts, invitations to pitch (RFP's), and creative reputation. There are other factors but these are some of the big ones. To me, a site that sets me apart really serves as validation that the skill level of the agency is what we claim it is.

I try to be honest in my advice to my clients - the internet is not always the solution for every business. 30 years ago, everyone needed to be in the yellow pages, but that really wasn't true. I recently worked on a freelance project where an agency was pitching a 100+ million dollar account. Do you really believe the client found the agencies they were considering by looking at their websites? No. I want to play in that arena.

Second, I am a lot more selective about who I will work with. Client/agency relationships tend to be long-termed and heavily engaged, it has to be a good match for both parties. I am not looking for huge budgets as much as I am looking for great clients, the two are not the same.

I have been blessed to have a career where I worked for some great advertising agencies where it was all about the quality of the work they produced for the clients. I learned from professionals who were proud and passionate about the art of advertising and how it can grow a business. They taught me to get wrapped up in the client's success, to really beleive in the accounts we are working on. I learned to that there is a skill and an art to what I do. they showed me that you can be passionate about your gift and make a living doing it. I love advertising. I can do a lot of things but this is what I love doing. Clients need to understand and appreciate that this is the type of agency they will be working with.

It is so hard to develop a site that conveys this passion. I see sites every day that really fall short. For some reason, we try to remove the emotions from a site, when we should be trying to cram as much emotion and passion in them as possible.

Truth be told, I am ready. I have access to some really good art directors and writers. I could do open my agency tomorrow - I have all the resources I need. All but one - a client or two. I don't want to start this and then have to go back to freelancing. I'm in it to win it. Once I start down this path, I will never go back. I'm patient. I owe it to the people that will be working with me to have my stuff together. And I will.

My website will be more than a display of my work or the stating of my philosophy, it will be an advertising resource. I don't plan to make money off of it, but I do want to do more than other agencies are doing with their sites. It will be nice.

I hope that helps.
Click to view snipperred's profile Mogul snipperred 147 posts since
Jun 11, 2008
8. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 3, 2008 4:59 PM
in response to: Iwrite
Thank you!

Beautiful response. Rich insights to glean from.
Click to view salakot's profile Professional salakot 3 posts since
Jul 11, 2008
9. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 11, 2008 8:04 AM
I have a new business i need marketing . how do i contact you. by e mail.
Click to view Iwrite's profile Mogul Iwrite 1,093 posts since
Dec 29, 2007
10. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 11, 2008 9:21 AM
in response to: salakot
That's easy - dereklw@mail.com
Click to view salakot's profile Professional salakot 3 posts since
Jul 11, 2008
11. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 13, 2008 8:33 AM
in response to: Iwrite
i sent e mail =no reply
Click to view Iwrite's profile Mogul Iwrite 1,093 posts since
Dec 29, 2007
12. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 13, 2008 5:13 PM
in response to: salakot
Got your email late on Friday. You should have a response from me in your email.
Click to view salakot's profile Professional salakot 3 posts since
Jul 11, 2008
13. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 14, 2008 6:10 AM
in response to: Iwrite
Not being in adverting
Iam at a loss as to the correct direction to proceed .
It must follow the law of deminishing returns .
A large amount of wasted advertising in the wrong place can only increase your costs and your competiveness
Example if i have an ice cream to sell .
its cost me say one dollar .
I walk up 3 roads and sell my product
for 2 dollars .
at the end of the week i make a living .
with big hopes i decide to go big advertise buy a vehicle pay gas employ a person sell five times more and end up less well off than when i walked three streets .
Click to view Iwrite's profile Mogul Iwrite 1,093 posts since
Dec 29, 2007
14. Re: Why my advertising agency does not have a website - yet. Jul 14, 2008 10:15 AM
in response to: salakot
True, but one of those vehicles may end up by a school or a factory and sell out of the product. As long as you don't extend your reach you are sure to get what you always got. Success is out there in the unknown.

The rate of success is tied to the amount of risk you are willing to take. Or at least I think so. Little risk, little success.

You can be safe and still take a risk.
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