Racheal Lee
Oct 4, 2012

Clients want to be challenged: DWA panel

SINGAPORE - Clients want agencies to take a proactive role to nudge and challenge them, while at the same time being able to deliver the work.

The panel discussion, from left: Silk, Bhattacharya, Cummings, Hills, Mohan and Lau
The panel discussion, from left: Silk, Bhattacharya, Cummings, Hills, Mohan and Lau

Howie Lau, vice president marketing and communications, Asia Pacific/Latin America (APLA) at Lenovo, said the market is moving fast and hence clients need works that can be delivered.

“We have been debating on the right agency structure and we are looking at the integrated nature of agency,” he added. “We have the 5P culture [plan, perform, practice, prioritising and pioneer]. We also want agencies that come and challenge us.”

Lau was speaking as part of a panel discussion in DWA’s customer engagement seminar, entitled 'Evolving your marketing strategy with consumption trends', yesterday in Singapore. The panel discussion was moderated Atifa Silk, editorial director of Campaign Asia-Pacific.

Ajay Mohan, Intel Asia-Pacific director, partner marketing and web marketing, marketing and consumer sales, noted that it is difficult for agencies to balance and to push the boundaries, because obviously they don’t want to offend the clients.

“They don’t want to lose the account and retainership,” Anol Bhattacharya, CEO at GetIT Communication, echoed. He added that clients are evolving and going for digital, and that agencies need to tell them “the right thing”.

On ROI measurement, Damien Cummings, Samsung's regional marketing director, digital and social media, said it can be difficult to decide whether a campaign has been successful, as the success or failure may rest on the marketing strategies or the product itself.

Bhattacharya noted that while clients can get consumer engagement on Facebook, the “like” is the only thing they can measure.

“We stop measuring the thing because we don’t know what to do after that,” he said. “Also, the gap between sales and marketing needed to be broken up. If they don’t break down the silo, it is hard to measure.”

Mohan, nevertheless, said every measurement is data, and translating these data and applying them meaningfully is essential. “It is the biggest input any agency can give back to me.”

Robbie Hills, head of media technology solutions at Google, said media agencies collect ample data from campaigns. Failing to get and analyse those data is a waste, he said.

Related Articles

Just Published

4 hours ago

Creative Minds: Jereek Espiritu pushes his ideas to ...

An intervention by a computer repairman drove Jereek Espiritu away from a career flying helicopters to a world of creative leaps and flights of fancy.

5 hours ago

UM launches Full Colour Media with a focus on ...

Full Colour Media is underpinned by a body of custom research conducted with more than 10,000 brands and with 5 million data points, culminating in a ‘Brand Patterns’ proprietary model designed to grow and differentiate brands.

7 hours ago

Campaign Global Agency of the Year Awards 2024: ...

With the final entry deadline for Agency of the Year Global fast approaching, we speak to judges who share their views on the biggest opportunities and challenges for 2025, and what they hope to see in winning entries.

7 hours ago

The 'laziest influencer' makes cleaning effortless—l...

S.C. Johnson's new mold-cleaning campaign features their least energetic spokesperson ever—a sloth whose main qualification is mastering the art of minimal effort.