Making Creativity Accountable: How Successful Advertisers Manage Their Television and Print
By (Author) Ronald C. Harding
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
26th August 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Budgeting and financial management
659.10681
Hardback
208
A comprehensive handbook for advertising and marketing managers, this volume shows how advertisers can effectively control agency costs without sacrificing creativity. Ron Harding profiles companies that have effectively enforced accountability on thier agencies and demonstrates proven internal systems for controlling the advertizing process - and its associated costs - from the initial spending plan through the final examination of actual expenditures. He also offers a pragmatic discussion of the procedures, timetables, and contracts managers need to put in place to ensure that all sectors of the agency - account, creative, legal, production and business affairs - act in the best interest of their client and at the highest levels of their capability. All major categories of spending receive thorough coverage: television, print, talent, and media. After an introduction which highlights the problems of runaway costs and mismanagement that plague many advertisers today, Harding presents a step-by-step guide to controlling advertizing expenditures. Among the topics addressed are: how to create realistic spending plans and make them strict buying guides for the agency; how to spot successful advertising; how to make creative groups accountable; how to run a successful copy meeting; how to stop cost overruns in television and print; and how to streamline and strengthen the brand management system. Harding fully reviews how to cut costs at each stage - from the project initiation form, through copy and storyboards, to editing and final production. Written in clear, conversational style, the book focuses throughout on a pragmatic approach to advertising management while recognizing the central importance of creativity. In fact, Harding argues, by understanding the creative-cost equation and how to maniuplate its variables, advertisers will necessarily reap the benefits of better advertising.
"As corporate advertising departments are reduced or eliminated, this volume will be an invaluable tool for marketing managers and executives increasingly involved with managing television and print production."-Martin Maurice, Senior Vice President Manager TV Production Young & Rubicam, New York
"Ron Harding's book is the road map for the client guerillas' who will create a new world of creative and cost effective and classic advertising."-Dirk Wales, President Rainbow Productions International
. . . A pragmatic analysis of every stage of the advertising process, prescribing specific remedies in such areas as tightening budgets, eliminating overruns, forgoing unnecessary overscale talent, and planning for cost-effective shooting. Harding's own experience supports the validity of his purpose to give agencies more latitude to generate great work and ensure greater accountability for their efforts'.-George L. George Backstage/SHOOT
." . . A pragmatic analysis of every stage of the advertising process, prescribing specific remedies in such areas as tightening budgets, eliminating overruns, forgoing unnecessary overscale talent, and planning for cost-effective shooting. Harding's own experience supports the validity of his purpose to give agencies more latitude to generate great work and ensure greater accountability for their efforts'."-George L. George Backstage/SHOOT
RON HARDING is President of Harding & Company, a consulting firm specializing in advertising and communications. He was Director of Advertising Production for Gillette for thirteen years and Production Supervisor at Procter & Gamble for nine years. His articles have appeared in Advertising Age, Backstage, and Business Week.