1975 - 1980
Possibly the best pro tip I got in the 17 years I
worked in advertising is to prefer products from Procter and Gamble.
Learning that tidbit came from the most domineering relationship I've ever had.
When I joined Ogilvy and Mather, a top ranked
worldwide ad agency on May 5, 1975, I didn't know that it was the watershed day
of my working life.
I had been sent to Ogilvy & Mather by a
headhunter as cannon fodder. That is, they expected someone with experience in
the advertising business would get the job. I had none and was to show what
unqualified looked like.
I was interviewed by five executives. It helped
that I had traveled in central Asia. That appealed to two who had also traveled
but not as far. It helped that I had an MBA and unique experience. That
appealed to another, a Dartmouth MBA. It helped that I had lived in Los
Angeles. That appealed to one more who had stars in his eyes. And because I was
well read I could b.s. on many subjects. That appealed to the ultimate decision
maker, the agency Chairman, Roy MacLaren, who just a few years later was
elected to parliament and served as a cabinet minister under Pierre Trudeau.
In the ad business your personal brand is based on
which firm and who your clients are. So working at Ogilvy was good branding for
me as were my initial clients, Unilever and General Foods. They were in the
packaged goods business, the most sophisticated area of advertising because
they had big budgets, advertised primarily on television, were international
and did the most market research. So right from the get go I was at the
pinnacle of the business but in an entry level position.
I developed quickly. I worked for smart people who
knew what they were doing. I was an Account Executive reporting to an Account
Supervisor who reported to an Account Director. That’s the way Josef Stalin
would have organized it.
As an account executive my responsibilities
included minding a brand book which contained schedules, proposals, strategies,
minutes, media plans, finances, research results, client biographies, the
advertising history and more, all in one
place. I was not required to have opinions but I was required to have relevant
facts handy. That was the easy part.
The hard part of account management was
coordinating, facilitating and optimizing relationships among all the
stakeholders which included in order of importance, clients, the four agency
service groups [creative development, media planning and buying, market research
and advertising production], agency leaders and finally consumers.
It was stressful but I had a fear of death
personality and grew rapidly in the job.
And because of that I was promoted to Account
Supervisor effective February 9, 1977. It came with new accounts and two new
bosses; David Rutherford and Wayne Jordan. They were new to the agency having
just been hired away from Procter and Gamble where they were senior marketing
managers. They had been clients of ad agencies but had never worked in one.
That was ominous for two reasons.
Firstly, having been client side they were more
command and control than listen and serve.
Secondly, Procter and Gamble isn't like other
companies. They are more disciplined. For example they never cut their advertising
budgets when profits are tight. They fire people instead. And they tend not to
join industry associations. They think there is nothing to learn from the
competition and they don’t want to share their secrets. Not collegial.
It took about two weeks for the agency to realize
that assigning me to work for two newbies was probably a bridge too far. I was
asked to choose one to bet my career on.
I chose Rutherford because the clients that went
with him were more interesting to me.
David and I filled an empty space in each other. I
needed a wise disciplinarian father figure to channel my underused brain and he
needed someone who would gladly disciple at his knee. He played the role of an
English don who thought Captain Bligh was misunderstood. Challenging.
We were a combustible combination. While we did
good work together David had to sweat from his teeth teaching me to write his
way. That helped me think better and professionally.
Everything about being treated like an empty vessel
that needed to be filled with right thinking left me stressed that I could
crash and burn. That was a hypothetical horrible that motivated me to work hard
to succeed. I was very good from time to time but never good enough for my
ersatz dad to let me feel whole.
We lasted four years together. In 1980 David was
promoted to Managing Director of the firm and I chased a shiny object moving to
McCann Erickson to work on the Coca Cola account for a nice raise in pay.
During most of my time at Ogilvy and Mather I had
clients who competed with Procter and Gamble brands. And usually the P&G
brand was the market leader. I learned the reason why from David. P&G
brands sell more because they are manufactured with better ingredients and more
expensive engineering so while they cost more to buy they are worth it.
And that is something worth surviving a life
changing boss to find out.
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