- Facing tremendous pressure on numerous fronts, media agencies are reinventing themselves, according to a new report by market research firm Forrester.
- The report assessed nine media agencies based on their market presence, offerings, and future strategy related to issues like brand safety, transparency, and media-vendor relations.
- The report found that media agencies are doing more contextual buys and forging more direct relationships.
- They are also getting more transparent, buying across more types of media, and helping clients close the attribution loop.
With media agencies facing tremendous pressure on numerous fronts, traditional ways of media planning and buying just don’t cut it anymore.
Marketers are increasingly looking for media agencies that not only do planning and buying but offer business and technology strategy and data and analytics expertise. They want ad buys that don’t achieve just reach and frequency but are personalized and informed by technology.
Agencies are rising to the challenge, according to a Forrester report released Thursday, which assessed nine media agencies under $20 billion in billings: Assembly, Dentsu X, Hearts & Science, Horizon Media, Initiative, Mediahub, PHD, Spark Foundry, and Vizeum.
In the report, led by analyst Jay Pattisall, the market research company assessed the agencies based on their market presence, offerings, and strategy, including how well they were handling issues like brand safety, transparency, and media-vendor relations. They were ranked as leaders, strong performers, or contenders.
Here’s how these different media agencies are reinventing themselves:
Agencies are merging media, content, and context
While most full-service media agencies develop content, the best ones put advertising in the right consumer context.
One unnamed agency, for example, hacked ad-blockers on websites to promote Netflix’s “Black Mirror,” targeting ad-blocking consumers with messages about the persuasiveness of technology to promote the series, which warns of societal dependence on technology.
Forrester also lauded Mediahub, saying that clients liked the IPG Mediabrands agency for its transparency, use of emerging technologies, and creative applications of media.
They’re proactively addressing marketers’ transparency concerns
Nearly three years since the Association of National Advertisers issued a bombshell report that painted the media-buying world as rife with illegal rebates, some agencies have cleaned up their act better than others.
The report singled out Horizon Media, the largest independent agency in the US, as an example of a media agency that gets transparency right by having commissioned PwC to independently audit its practices.
Others are rethinking how they buy media
Some full-service agencies have reduced their dependence on reselling media in favor of using curated marketplaces, according to Forrester.
Hearts & Science, for one, operates private marketplaces that let clients directly buy ads on publisher’s websites at pre-negotiated rates, ensuring brands’ ads end up where they’re supposed to, reducing costs, and minimizing waste.
“Its ability to create private marketplaces to ensure impression quality and its strong belief that clients should own their data and tech contracts shows high proficiency with data analytics,” the analysts wrote.