Pan Am Makes the Going Great, Eastern Airlines is No. 1 to the Sun, TWA is Up, Up and Away, and each of the three has a superlative advertising campaign going. So does Ford, which has a Better Idea and a light bulb to prove it. Or Excedrin, whose headaches (one of the latest is Exced rin No. 1040just in time for the income tax deadline), have become family catch phrases.
All such campaigns represent the bright approach that has recently come to be associated with brash agency newcomers such as Mary Wells or Carl Ally. However, all of these campaigns spun out of the long-established agenciesthe ones that were supposed to be drowsing.
The biggest agencies are bigger than ever. They have had some troubles: Interpublic, a combination of 24 advertising, public relations and service agencies built around the corporate structure of second largest agency McCann-Erickson, has to be taken apart, shorn of some of its less productive components, and put together again without Founder Marion Harper. Even so, in spite of uncertain economic conditions, the ten largest agencies* have been doing very well. Last year, with total advertising-agency business slipping to an increase of less than 2%, the top tenthat jointly bill $3.27 billionnot only increased their business but generally managed to come out ahead in earnings.
Fewer People, Better Paid. One reason they did is that, like their blue-chip clients, the big agencies have been able to take advantage of economies of size. "Bigness is really an asset," says Young & Rubicam President Stephen O. Frankfurt. All are using computers, which not only tot up possible profits but also give a broad idea of agency problems. With the help of the expensive computers, and with payrolls representing 70% of total expense, the agencies have been able to cut back on clerical help and thus reduce such other overhead as floor space. As a result, they have been free to pay more money to the creative people they most need. J. Walter Thompson, biggest of all agencies, with total billings last year of $590 million, has even turned the situation into an intramural campaign. Chairman Norman Strouse refers to the new look at J. Walter as "fewer, better people, better paid."
The bigger agencies have cut back on other services they formerly offered. Clients heretofore demanded, and got, not only advertising but market research, promotion, even product placement as well. Now agencies are no longer willing to do so muchat least not without fatter fees. "What's happened," says B.B.D. & O. Executive Vice President James Schule, "is that we have a better balance between services like market research, product development and testing and public relations v. pure advertising."
