Monthly Archives: September 2013

Is your big idea a one-off?

$27 car rentalHere’s a picture of a shop near my office. Three weeks ago it was a Lamborghini dealership. Now it’s a place that rents small cars for $27 a day. I reckon that might be a pretty good reflection of where things are at. It seems most successful business models now drive profit through volume rather than margin. And I’m relatively sure there are more people looking to rent a car for $27 a day rather than buy one for a lazy half million dollars.
Look at the businesses making all the money – supermarkets, Google, telcos, the list goes on. They all sell lots of product for a small margin rather than fewer products at a large margin (perhaps with the exception of Apple, who seem to be doing both margin and volume).

And that brings me to advertising agencies. Most advertising agencies deliver a very bespoke product. It’s an idea or advertising campaign designed to suit a particular client’s needs. Even if it can be used to carry another client’s message, it’s contractually obligated not to do so. This means all the work  you do in delivering a product (campaign or idea) amounts to one sale.
So rather than make one product and sell it thousands, perhaps millions, of times  we make one product and sell it once. (Actually, it’s lower than once when you consider the ideas and campaigns we work on that the client doesn’t buy.)

Then on top of this, you have other forces working against the ‘way it used to be’. The internet has conditioned us not to pay for stuff anymore. It’s given rise to the Fremium model, and things like Fiverr.
Sure, in most cases, you get what you pay for. But it seems people don’t like paying for the art of a Lamborghini when they think they can do the same with a car for $27.
So what about you and that big idea you’re working so hard on? Are you only going to sell it once?

DUSTIN LANE
Brand Strategy | Advertising Concepts | Copywriting

Visit risinggiants.co or dustinlanecreative.com

Are you getting in to advertising, or getting out?

Years ago, I was asked to give a talk to advertising students at a university.
Now, it seemed that every intern or grad primarily wants to know the answer to two questions: 1) How did you get your job?; and 2) What advice would you give to others?

So in preparation for my talk, I took the opportunity to ask a few colleagues around the department and filmed their responses. That way, the students at the lecture could hear other stories as well as mine.
This video is below (please excuse the transitions – it was 2006. I was young. iLife was in its infancy).

I once heard the story of a young creative being told, ‘You’ll be underpaid in the first half of your career, and overpaid in the second half of it’. Well, I’m not sure the back half of that sentence still applies in today’s world. The profit margins simply aren’t there anymore.

But recently I came across another video, below. It’s not about getting in to advertising. Instead, it’s about using advertising as a stepping stone towards something else. Spending time in the advertising industry provides you with some great skills – you get to think outside the box, you get to challenge conventions, you see behind the curtain of lots of different industries.

One of the best books I’ve read over the past few years is Seth Godin’s Linchpin: Are You IndispensibleIt really opened my eyes to the way industries have historically worked, and how all that is now changing.
For me, that book was a bit like opting to take the red pill.
So what about you? Are you getting in, or getting out?

DUSTIN LANE
Brand Strategy | Advertising Concepts | Copywriting

Visit risinggiants.co or dustinlanecreative.com