
Agreeing with the report, Michel de Rijk, chief executive officer for the Asia Pacific at S4 Capital, tells Campaign Asia-Pacific the traditional holding company solution is to create a "custom integrated" agency for a client, which brings teams of different agencies together.
However, de Rijk questions how real this integration is in all these cases.
"Are they one team operating under a single profit and loss? Or is it more window dressing? The future will tell. Secondly, how siloed are the brands' teams? Are there still different budget holders we need to work with across media, commerce or customer experience management that we need to work with? Finally, are all the internal teams aligned?" he asks.
Vishnu Mohan, partner and chief growth officer at Dept, says the broader agency universe has a very high representation of legacy agencies for whom making the adjustments at the required pace is a challenge amid internal pushback and costs.
He points out acquisitions have invariably been the way for them. Still, it has only added to the silo perception as they have not been able to integrate these new assets, which are different in their DNA to the mothership.
"Digital native agencies have done well standing up to many of these expectations, but most are still either tech-heavy or content-heavy," he explains.
Michael Patent, founder and president at Culture Group adds successful cultural engagement stems from an inherent understanding of the passion point, the consumer, and the role brands can play in that process.
He says brands that do this successfully are ‘culturists’ as they provoke and shape culture, rather than follow it.
"One of the biggest challenges we see with most brands is that their culture knowledge and strategy is based largely on what was presented to them by salespeople from media companies and platforms. It discounts entirely the consumer lifestyle and the role the brand can play," Patent says.
"It’s easily noticeable which brands understand culture and community, and which brands don’t. Go into your local mall, the store that always has the line outside is usually the one that live in culture, rather than follows it."
85% of clients agree there should be a more intelligent way to scale for a sustainable world, while 76% simply want their agencies to connect the right talent around the proper brief, regardless of where it sits.
Diverse creative talent is seen by CMOs as a critical enabler of modern creativity, agreeing that differences of thought and background can yield the most robust work. According to the report, clients today demand that agency teams should reflect the diversity of the modern world.
Shufen Goh, principal and co-founder of R3, says it is great to see that marketers have made the connection between creative excellence and talent diversity. However, she notes most CMOs believe that talent scarcity is a significant blocker to growth.
"One of the ways marketers can encourage their partners to adopt and continue best practice talent management is by understanding agency ways of working and policies, setting benchmarks, demanding accountability, and encouraging sustainability of such practices through fair compensation," she explains.
"The big struggle is dismantling structures, updating skillsets and processes built for mass efficient reach, to what consumers respond to, which is more personalised and engaging conversations. Back to the basic principle of being relevant at the right time."