In 1999, I crammed myself into a Marriott Hotel conference room with over two thousand other people. Standing room only. Speak- ers lined up on the front row with notes in clammy hands. We were at one of the earliest Account Planning Group conferences in the United States. The energy was palpable. As everyone settled in to listen to the first speaker, I—and every other person in the room—realized that because of the two thousand souls in this room, the advertising industry in the United States would never again be the same. This was a pivotal moment in our industry. Truly, the beginning of a new and exciting era.
I had been headhunted from the trendy, maverick London hot shop, Howell Henry Chaldecott Lury, 6 months earlier, to bring the discipline of account planning to iconic Southern ad agency, McKinney & Silver. A big Audi of America client meeting had been canceled, and I was curious to see what a room full of American planners looked like, so had decided at the last minute to attend the conference. I have never loved crowded conferences, being somewhat introverted and slightly claustrophobic. But planning was in its infancy in the USA, so I assumed the conference would be small, intimate, low key, and manageable.
I couldn’t have been more wrong. Where had these people come from? How was it possible that over two thousand planners could even exist in America already, never mind attend the same conference?
As I worked my way around the room, uncomfortably introducing myself to those in close proximity, I quickly realized that only about a tenth of these people were truly experienced account planners. And most of those were Brits who had crossed the pond before me, bringing the discipline with them. I already knew some of them from the UK, and several were my heroes—they had sought new adventures in the U.S., after making their mark on the industry after many, many years in London agencies.
So, if most weren’t already planners, who were they? As it turned out, they were account managers, media planners, researchers, business analysts, and brand consultants. Like moths to a flame, they had smartly noticed the brilliant growth of this important new discipline in other agencies all across North America and had responded by switching hats and quickly learning this new trade—typically, from their new British department heads.
I believed then, and still believe today, that only in America could a craft that had taken over 30 years to develop in the UK be so quickly mastered by a ragtag group of strategic and insightful misfits. Today, this group has become, arguably, the most influential account planning force in the world. And all of this over a short handful of years.
Over 2 decades later, we find ourselves at another pivotal moment, as our industry struggles to stay relevant in the aftermath of three serious crises, the most recent being COVID-19, which forced many of our agencies to their knees at shocking speed.
Over the last decade, in particular, the advertising industry has changed beyond recognition. Account planning, whose original role was to find and use consumer insight to inform stronger creative ideas, has been utterly transformed into a discipline that most of us don’t even call account planning anymore. (At our agency, we now call it strategic planning. It can also be called creative strategy, brand strategy, or brand planning. In reference to the early days, I will refer to it as account planning (in Chapters 1 and 2) and will then switch to strategic planning.)
If your agency is still hiring old-school planners whose sole skill set is feeding insights to creatives, that’s a good and necessary skill. But if they are unable to “land the plane” and pull those big insights into strategic, data-driven brand and business transformation ideas, they will not survive in today’s industry. Being too ethereal is, by far, the single biggest point of frustration and criticism that I hear from clients about these types of planners. And it inevitably results in them being taken off the business and, ultimately, asked to find a role elsewhere. And this has nothing to do with age or experience. I have had planners in their 50s and 60s in my team who have had stronger digital and social skills than planners half their age. It’s a question of making a commitment to continuously evolve and grow. Today’s strategists need to appreciate the need for both the art and the science of their craft. But it’s important that the science doesn’t dominate the art. After all, we are a creative industry. Only the correct blend of both will succeed.
Modern account planners are not one-dimensional. Nor are they “T-shaped.” To survive in an increasingly complex and competitive industry, they need to be “X-shaped,” to borrow a phrase from design thinking. This means that, rather than being highly skilled in only one area, they must have multiple skills that draw from various fields, including social, digital, brand, and connections planning, as well as content strategy, user experience, and media planning skills. The strategic planner continues to represent the consumer and make the work better. It is also our responsibility to ensure that the work “works,” by having a strong grasp of data and analytics, being able to analyze the category and business, being able to track cultural shifts and keep an eye on the competitive set, being skilled in brand development, and, importantly, being able to lead customer journey development—all important tools for the modern strategist.
Your agency is falling behind if it is not training and producing multiskilled X-shaped planners who possess all of these skills, as well as the ability to use a plethora of different research methodologies to truly understand the consumer mindsets, attitudes, and behaviors.
It sounds like a lot and it is. But it’s essential for the well-being of any contemporary agency—and to ensure a bright future for each planner. Earlier white papers and books claimed that advertising never needed account planning. While it may have added something extra that had value, it was not critical. Perhaps that used to have some degree of truth to it. Today, however, clients often demand account planners more than all other roles, except creative (quite rightly). I firmly believe that as account planning has become more of a strategic function, it has become absolutely essential.
In the following pages, I will, as simply and directly as possible (I am not and never will be an academic), share my experiences as a 30-year veteran of the advertising industry, a working chief strategy officer whose career spans the history of the discipline—from the extreme highs, to the brink of obscurity, and back again—across two continents and four cities.
The first chapter tells how it all began—first in the UK and then in the USA—and shares the story of my own start in the industry, and the digital and social explosions that changed everything. The rest of the book will focus on the tools of the account planners’ trade—both traditional and new—as well as insights into the quickly evolving industry that I chose to make my life’s work. I will also offer suggestions on how to, as an account planner or strategic planner, stay relevant, stay ahead, and stay interested in this exciting, sometimes exasperating, and always interesting career path.
I wrote this book primarily for all of those young would-be or current account planners and strategists who have asked me for recommendations over the years—because I got weary of suggesting book titles that were extremely outdated or too academic. Perhaps what I have learned over my long career to date will provide some helpful guidance. I hope you find this book useful, and that it helps you understand the role a modern X-shaped strategic planner—a Super Strategist—can play in helping build and transform your clients’ business.