The advertising agency model is over 100 years old and although there are countless versions of it, the reason it has lasted so long is because every competency represented has a purpose and reason for being there. That being said, you'd be surprised how few people in the industry (or wanting to get into the industry) can tell you what those competencies are and why they're important. So we figured a quick primer might be useful.
Now imagine that the Creative Director presents the work and goes around the table asking each person, "What do you think of the campaign?". What is the Creative Director really asking? Does s/he want your personal opinion? Probably not. You're being asked to weigh in on the campaign from the perspective of your competency and what that competency represents at the table. So who or what do each of these individuals represent at the table?
CLIENT SERVICES
The Account person is also in charge of growing the account, so they should be evaluating the campaign with that in mind also, but their primary role is to inform everyone of what the client is going to think, say and do about the campaign.
If the agency presents the work to the client, and the client's response is completely unaligned with what the Account person's direction was during the creative review - the Account person has failed in their responsibilities to know their client and be able to successfully represent/channel their client within the agency. The best Account people know their clients so well, that you will literally hear the exact words or phrases coming from the client that the Account person shared during the internal review. No joke.
STRATEGY (PLANNING)
The Strategist's job is to know the consumer inside and out; their interests, their language, their biases, their inspirations, etc. None of what the Strategist says at the table should be their opinion (because that's not what they're at the table for). Everything should be data-driven, based on verifiable facts from legitimate sources. There's a reason why talented Strategists are in such high demand at agencies, they - more than anyone else - have the ability to predict whether a campaign will be successful or not.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Most of the time, the Project Manager doesn't have enough data at the internal review to answer these questions, so their job is to moderate the discussion and make sure nobody starts talking about production elements that would be impossible to arrange given the timeline or hiring celebrity talent that they know the budget can't afford. They're also there to keep the team honest about what the agency does and doesn't do, since many times there are capabilities required in creative campaigns that are outside of the agency's expertise. This is a good time for the PM to highlight those things and solicit from Creative whether they have a plan for acquiring those capabilities or whether they're simply putting something forth that is cool and trendy but have no idea how to actually execute it.
If the campaign gets approved by the client, it's Project Management that's on the hook for getting it executed on time and within budget, so although PMs can often be viewed as obstructionist or lacking "vision", the reality is they're simply making sure that when it's their job on the line to deliver - they're able to do so.
CREATIVE
If Account represents the client, Strategy represents the audience and Project Management represents the agency, who does Creative represent? The industry itself. That's right - Creative is there to provide award-winning ideas and executions that will not only make them famous but push the practice of Creativity to new levels of excellence.
So you can see the "healthy" tension that exists in the room, right? At the highest level, everyone wants to do outstanding work that delivers sales and grows the account profitably for the agency. But each has their own interests to put above the others, which is why internal reviews can be so challenging. That's how the system is designed though, so that only the best work gets through - and the input from each representative is vital to success.
The agency model works because the sum of the various inputs is comprehensive vs being biased toward one or two competencies. The same applies to your Agency Management Software. If you're trying to make sound agency decisions based on just the output of a Project Management system, you're working with only part of the puzzle.
You don't want campaigns leaving the agency without the input from each competency and you don't want decisions being made without the input from each system. Tie it all together with Advantage. Schedule a free online demo and see how easy and economical it is to do so.