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Stone's Throw Creative Communications

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August 22, 2013 Comments

Hire an ad agency or DIY?

When to do it yourself: 

A journalist for a local business publication asked us if smaller companies should hire ad agencies. Well, that certainly got us talking. Of course, we shouldn’t make sweeping generalizations, but we can address some of the issues smaller businesses should consider before they reach out for help.

Our advice in a nutshell:

A small business typically doesn’t employ someone dedicated to its marketing efforts, so it often makes sense to hire a specialist … for some things. You can then employ the best talent, at competitive costs, just when you need it – similar to how a small business might hire an accountant or other professional service provider. Use your time to leverage your expertise to generate income for your business. Use someone else’s time to leverage their expertise on your behalf.

Be selective.

If you think you can’t afford to hire comprehensive marketing and creative support, get picky. Hire a marketing professional only to help you develop a promotional plan or strategy, then consider what can be handled well internally and what would benefit from objective creative or professional execution. If you have a brand and a plan, and can follow style guidelines set by your professionals, you can choose to get help when it will really pay off.

When we work with clients, we provide flexibility when it’s needed. We’ll create structures that help to ensure the success of what a client produces in-house. For example, we’ll provide advertising and presentation templates, easy-to-follow style guidelines, and content management training for website maintenance and blog updates. Any quality partner should offer you a similar working relationship.

Get your important marketing communications done well.

Not that everything isn’t important, but some communications have much greater visibility, or are finely tuned to target a specific subset of your market, and will suggest that you’ve made an investment in yourself (or that you haven’t). That’s something that has the potential to breed confidence in your customers. Those communications will likely include your brand identity and your advertising style and core messaging — the pieces you’ll want to get right, right from the start.

So, if you’re considering hiring some outside assistance, ask yourself these questions:

– Does the necessary talent exist internally?

– Will handling this project internally put a strain on our resources?

– Will I have more or less control over the project?

– Will the project benefit from objectivity?

If your answers point you to finding outside help, it’s time to take a look at available marketing and creative service providers. Use your Chamber directory. Ask colleagues and friends for recommendations. If you search online, don’t simply review a firm’s portfolio, look for client recommendations. Interview the firms that appeal to you and ask for a proposal or estimate, just as you would for other services. That will help you understand the firm’s approach and give you an idea of what it’s like to work with them.

Read the interview with Stone’s Throw’s Deanne Napurano in Mercer Business magazine.

© Stone’s Throw, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

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August 15, 2013 Comments

Hiring outside creative

How do you determine its value?

When we launched our business in 1991, the economic climate felt eerily similar to what we’re feeling today. Circumstances are different, but even a casual observer can see a familiar reticence when it comes to organizations spending on new programs, new marketing initiatives. Some companies are bringing the creation and production of their marketing and sales tools back in-house hoping to reduce costs, but are finding that the process, the resulting materials and their effectiveness may not be what they bargained for. Some of our clients have found the following Creative Business article helpful in determining the value of contracting outside creative services.

Evaluating outside services: Measuring the true cost of creativity

It is relatively easy for an organization to determine the true cost of manufactured goods – a combination of raw material, fabrication, marketing and distribution, labor, and overhead costs.

Much more difficult to determine is the true cost of services. Services are labor-intensive, not capital-intensive; their value lies not so much in what they provide today as in what they contribute to the future; and comparison and evaluation is always qualitative, seldom quantitative.

Here are some things to consider when evaluating how to handle your organization’s requirements for creative services.

The need for specialists

Being efficient and competitive in today’s global economy not only requires an organization to utilize the most sophisticated of resources, but also to maintain a high degree of flexibility. The only way to accomplish both cost-effectively is to employ a core staff of managers, and to supplement them with trusted outside specialists when required. This way, it is possible to employ the best possible talent at competitive costs.

Specifically, when it comes to creative services, it is nearly impossible for any organization to employ enough talented individuals – writers, graphic designers, illustrators, and photographers – to handle its many different communications needs internally.

Real versus “company” money

On the surface, utilizing outside vendors often seems exorbitantly costly. In fact, however, they are usually very cost-competitive, and may even be less expensive than attempting to handle the same work internally.

The reason for the appearance of high cost is that corporate bookkeeping practices and internal budget transfers seldom reflect the true cost of internal labor.

Most commonly, internal department cross-charges only accommodate actual payroll expenses with a small factor thrown in for overhead expenses. When all costs – salaries, benefits, and overhead – are included, studies have shown that charges for outside creative vendors actually average about 5% less than the same work done internally.

Also important to consider is that except for the smallest of jobs, creative fees are always a small fraction of total job costs. Even when apparent (as opposed to real) costs are the basis for calculation, the incremental increase in creative costs attributable to going outside is seldom more than 5% to 10% on a small brochure or ad, or less than 1% on a major corporate brochure.

Keeping creative work inside for budget reasons seldom stands up to scrutiny.

Efficiency tests

Does the necessary talent exist internally? Some communications challenges take special talent, some don’t. But when talent is truly required, it seldom pays to compromise. Using well-meaning but unqualified internal staff can be very expensive in the long run – in lost efficiency and in market impact. And computers with specialized software are never any better than the talent and experience of those operating them. When effectiveness is critically important, hiring an outside specialist is always the least expensive and most productive alternative.

Will handling it internally put a strain on resources? The disruptive cost of handling an unusual or special assignment can cause havoc when staff are already overloaded. When faced with a special assignment, employees typically either give it low priority, in which case it is handled poorly, or they dedicate themselves to it, in which case their regular work suffers. Unless your staff is visible underutilized, always handle special assignments outside.

Will there be more or less control? This question is not as simple to answer as it may appear. Despite appearances to the contrary, work handled inside is usually less controllable because it is difficult to assign tough deadlines, make unpopular changes and be honestly critical. In even the best-run organizations, office politics and turf battles are a plague to productivity. When you absolutely, positively have to have it done, your way and on schedule, hire an outside vendor.

Will the project benefit from objectivity? Some communications challenges absolutely require it. For others it is not critical. You decide. If you are looking for a fresh viewpoint, however, keep in mind how difficult it is for anyone working close to the product, or within the sponsoring organization, to recognize distinctive, customer-appealing elements. If objectivity is important, hire an objective, outside resources.

Copyright © Creative Business.

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