Reason 1
Digital agencies are still built on the traditional agency philosophy "creative is king."
The focus of ad agencies has always been on delivering award-winning creative -- that visual and accompanying tag line that people will remember long after the campaign is over. Mr. Whipple asking, "Please don't squeeze the Charmin." A sexy woman singing, "I can bring home the bacon, fry it up in a pan." Or, most recently, a baby mouthing "that milkaholic Lindsay."
Today's digital agencies continue to strive for that same fame, albeit through their own (fast growing) set of digital marketing award programs and public social forums. There's no doubt the agency that created the now famous Monkey Mail had its 15 minutes of fame; however, there are thousands of new competitors just waiting for their turn in the spotlight. They are clever, creative, and hungry. They are the consumers. And they are outshining many agencies today in a highly visible way, with clients taking notice.
So what's an agency to do? Adopt the tried and true client philosophy that "revenue is king." Focus on the connection between a communications program/campaign the agency develops and real revenue implications for the client. Revenue can mean gross sales (e.g., Dell's use of Twitter). But it can also equal savings that go straight to the bottom line. For example, AMP's recent iPR work for an international brand generated media placements that would have required more than $1 million in net media expense to replicate.
Work in collaboration with clients to establish the benchmarks that make sense for their situation -- true business benchmarks that can be used to justify the agency expense. Sexy is fun, but cash is still king to clients.