Media Trading Transparency: Where There’s Smoke…

In March 2015, former Mediacom USA CEO Jon Mandel dropped a bomb at the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) conference, stating that media agencies and their holding companies were significantly involved in what, at best, could be described as “questionable” trading practices across all media.

As a result, the ANA commissioned K2, forensic investigators, and Ebiquity, one of the leading media auditors, to investigate. The report that the ANA released was, depending on whether you are an advertiser or an agency representative, either a seismic event that exposed many of the unsavory things long rumored — or it was a toothless report full of unfounded and anonymous falsehoods.

It now seems the U.K. has its own Jon Mandel. Scott Moorhead, former head of digital trading at Havas Media, dropped a truth bomb last week, stating that — surprise! — agencies make tons of money on all kinds of deals that favor their income, but aren’t necessarily in the interest of their clients.

The industry response was immediate and predictable. The ISBA, the U.K. counterpart of the ANA, said Moorhead’s statements were “significant” and call “for scale change in the media industry.” The agencies said Moorhead’s allegations were only made for his own benefit, since  he had just launched himself as a consultant to help advertisers with agency trust issues.

ISBA has been on the agencies’ case for a long time. It published their recommended contract template for its advertiser-members at the beginning of this year, well before Moorhead’s revelations. And in an article from a good few weeks ago, ISBA’s Director of Media and Advertising Mark Finney stated that the only way the gaping trust gap will ever be addressed is by having an honest dialogue and open debate about how agencies and advertisers want to trade and treat each other.

In my simplistic vision, both sides must come to terms with the current state of the media industry, and must be willing to compromise. It’s undoubtedly true that advertisers have cut back on the fees they pay agencies for their services. There is a chicken-and-egg question here: Has this happened because agencies seem to be making large sums of money? Or are agencies being forced to find new sources of income, because advertisers have been cutting back?

It’s also undoubtedly true that digital advertising specifically has created a very large source of opportunistic income through mark-ups and fees, as well as an enormous pool of straightforward waste and loss of advertising impact through fraud that simply has not been addressed adequately to date.

So if we can accept these two issues as facts, then we have, I believe, a basis for conversation. In a world where more and more agencies are paid for the performance of the advertising they create and place, it would be in agencies’ interest to address the murkiness of digital advertising. And in a world where advertisers want openness, fairness and trust with the agencies that manage their budgets, advertisers must not only call “foul” but must also be willing to talk about fair payment for work delivered.

If 2016 has been the year of naming the issues, then perhaps 2017 can be the year of building a new trust. Call it The New Deal? Who steps up first?


By Maarten Albarda, Featured Contributor
Maarten has lived in five countries across three continents and honed his integrated marketing communication skills at JWT, Leo Burnett, McCann-Erickson, The Coca-Cola Company and AB-InBev. He now runs his own integrated marketing consultancy in partnership with Flock Associates, and has written the book “Z.E.R.O.” with Joseph Jaffe.
Courtesy of mediapost

 

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