Once you’ve hired an agency, how does that relationship actually develop? After more than fifteen years of success, here’s what Big Leap has learned about the power of the client-agency relationship.?
Relationships are tricky—whether they’re between people or businesses and agencies. But you can nurture an effective agency-client relationship with these core principles.?
- Alignment: When working with an agency, you need a designated point of contact (POC). However, you also need the POC’s team aligned on their efforts to work with the agency. It’s much easier to get work done with everyone on board.?
- Integration: Integration comes naturally with proper alignment. When this happens, you don’t have to micromanage projects. The agency acts as an interdependent, integrated extension of your team.?
- Culture: An ideal client-agency relationship happens when both parties have a similar culture. Cultivate a relationship with a group that shares your values and your best habits.?
- Accountability: Accountability drives transparent conversations without either party becoming argumentative. Teams should be willing to talk to the other party if they’re not holding up their end of the bargain.
- Complementary Strengths: You don’t need to double up coverage on a job you already do well. A working relationship should match one organization’s strengths to the other’s limitations.?
- Communication: Nothing else happens without a foundation of good communication. Listen, give feedback, and use communication tools effectively to keep collaboration open and productive.?
So what is the most critical factor in the agency-client relationship? Creating a healthy dynamic through a candid yet caring approach.
How do you know a relationship will turn out well? It takes the right skill set and behavior from both parties. Here’s what we mean.
Good agencies have established processes that keep campaigns—and relationships—on track. These are three skills Big Leap focuses on:?
- Establish fluid communication. Fluid communication doesn’t happen on its own. Established processes and checkpoints ensure information exchanges happen at the right times between the right people. This establishes trust and keeps the campaign moving.
- Eliminate silos. While agencies often have different teams working on different marketing tactics, those teams shouldn’t be siloed from one another. The best agencies share resources and collaborate across teams.
- Don’t overpromise. Realistic expectations are key to any relationship. When it comes to marketing campaigns, right-sized promises show an understanding of the competitive landscape of digital marketing and build trust in the outcomes.
Clients are the other half of this partnership, and their contributions are just as crucial. Learn from the suggestions of Jared Belsky, CEO and co-founder of digital marketing agency Acadia:?
- Manifest curiosity, empathy, and trust. Don’t approach the agency with a combative attitude. They’re here to help! When you communicate with empathy and demonstrate trust in them, they’re more likely to meet your expectations.
- Have frequent touchpoints. Working together allows you to form better relationships—and this means actively communicating and collaborating. Frequent touchpoints allow you to develop the project you envision.
- Eliminate silos in your own departments. Agencies aren’t the only ones who can silo projects and information. Eliminate your own silos so that everyone, internal and external, has access to the same tools.
At Big Leap, we seek clients who recognize the long-term value and compounding nature of digital marketing. Our 6-year relationship with a renowned car rental company is a testament to the values we’ve discussed earlier. With many key stakeholders on the client side, establishing expectations, goals, and relationship dynamics up-front on our end was essential.
In return, they’ve given us trust and transparency. It works! Their industry expertise and click here to read the full article. >>
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4 个月I can't help but agree how critical it is to hold an agency accountable. Focused assessment of the work is key to this kind of relationship, and if expectations are not met, it's key for the client to remember exactly who the customer is, and who is the service provider. A monstrous red flag in these situations is when agency points of contact act as if they're "doing you a favor", when expectations have clearly not been met. Always remember that there are many, many agencies available to serve you - never let anyone sell you on underperformance. ??