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Madison Avenue Manslaughter: An Inside View of Fee-Cutting Clients, Profit-Hungry Owners and Declining Ad Agencies

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The advertising industry has reached a critical and dangerous point in its development - agencies destroy themselves by doing increased work for declining fees. So what are the logical consequences of the failure to act? Growing workloads and declining fees have created a "recipe for disaster." For the first time, Michael Farmer offers a solution to avoid this seemingly inevitable disaster. This book offers the world's first effective definition of "the real agency problem." Once the problem is understood, the author offers corrective solutions. Now in its third edition, Madison Avenue Manslaughter has been updated to include industry developments from 2017-2018, plus new material and chapters. This book is a call to action for the 21st-century breed of "mad men," which outlines the industry problems and encourages agencies and their clients to take management actions to keep this disaster at bay. These actions form the basis of a strategic response by agency CEOs as well as corporate chief marketing officers.

288 pages, Paperback

First published September 15, 2015

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Michael Farmer

26 books9 followers

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Vincent.
14 reviews
August 12, 2024
Madison Avenue was a very interesting and geeky read, authored by an advertising agency consultant, in the context of understanding the 50s-80s and how advertising agencies slowly died in favour of management consultants. The advertising executives failed to catch two significant waves: operational efficiency and the shift away from media spending commission-based remuneration. Their business model was not prepared for a world where television was slowly becoming just one of many channels, with the internet ultimately delivering the coup de grâce during the dot-com bubble.

In the first part, the book delves into the organisational challenges faced by advertising agencies, highlighting their failure to document, measure, and track workloads effectively. This oversight led to a misdiagnosis of strategic problems and an inability to adapt to changing market dynamics (including financial crises, the rise of procurement and management consultants in particular focusing on operational efficiency ). Farmer emphasises the need for agencies to shift from a creativity-centric model to one focused on delivering measurable results for clients (with a clear scope of work) aligning with the growing need to deliver shareholder value (and the rise of “finance”.

There are many interesting references to “strategic positioning” and "shareholder value," often forgotten in creative industries but clearly core to the rise of data-driven brand executives such as CMOs, who heavily rely on social media platforms for distribution.

The follow-up of this book for me will be a series of management consultants' history books as I believe that's where the future of this industry lies and I'm keen to understand its trajectory. Highly recommend this book to anyone working in marketing or willing to understand the agency business.
Profile Image for Matt.
188 reviews10 followers
November 30, 2019
An interesting look at the decline of ad agencies from the Mad Men era to today. Some salient points about holding company financial pressure and the race to the bottom with fees.

Nothing earth-shatteringly new (though a good refresher on why agencies constantly seem to be trying to do more with less.) The second half of the book read more like a sales pitch for Farmer's consultancy business, but worth skimming through that part just to see what an approach to change would look like.
Profile Image for Alan Lewis.
6 reviews8 followers
January 1, 2022
Enjoyed the first half, which provided a credible history of ad agencies, in the aggregate, up through ~2010. But “digital”, mobile, and social ads are presented as unproven as formats that are still on the horizon, so reading it now the history is out of date. The latter half gives the author’s point of view on how to fix ad agencies, for which I’m not the target audience.
Profile Image for Jocelyn Fan.
16 reviews2 followers
February 11, 2022
Insightful. But more relevant to the creative agency, rather than media agency.
Profile Image for About Books.
14 reviews
September 20, 2016
At first, I was so excited about this book and went out of my way to buy it. The author does a great job outlining/ describing the profit centers and revenue paradigms of agencies and their transformations as the age of mergers and holding companies evolved. The writing is crisp. But it just took too long to get to conclusions. Conclusions that seemed fairly tactical and does nothing to remedy the slow strangulation imposed by holding company and shareholder profit squeeze.

I feel like its only a two star. But I gave it a third because I am so glad to see this "emperor's new clothes" look at the revenue structure of advertising agencies.
Profile Image for Catherine.
155 reviews1 follower
September 19, 2016
At first, I was so excited about this book and went out of my way to buy it. The author does a great job outlining/ describing the profit centers and revenue paradigms of agencies and their transformations as the age of mergers and holding companies evolved. The writing is crisp. But it just took too long to get to conclusions. Conclusions that seemed fairly tactical and does nothing to remedy the slow strangulation imposed by holding company and shareholder profit squeeze.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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