Wednesday, February 2, 2022

The Agency Workforce 2023: Automation And AI Will Reshape Media And Creative Agencies

Smaller And Smarter Organizations Will Master Intelligent Creativity

August 2, 2021

JPJay PattisallJPJ. P. Gownder

with Keith JohnstonJames McQuivey, PhDJoe StanhopeCraig Le ClairNick MonroeAlex SobchukRachel Birrell

Summary

Agencies are introducing technologies that reshape how they work: Artificial intelligence (AI) and intelligent automation (IA) in particular turbocharge agencies’ ability to enhance and scale creative production and to scale marketing campaigns with data-driven, real-time precision. But introducing these tools fundamentally changes the way agencies work, automating 11% of their workforce by 2023. This report shows the huge impact that AI and IA will have on agencies, how agency leaders should plan their staffing, and how CMOs at client companies should evaluate their agencies.

Topics

·      AI And Automation Radically Alter How Agencies Work

·      Agencies Will Shrink In Size As They Grow In Technology

·      Enhance Your Workforce Strategy With Intelligent Creativity

·      Transform Your Workforce To Realize Intelligent Creativity

·      Humans Plus Machines Yield An Era Of Intelligent Creativity

·      Supplemental Material

AI And Automation Radically Alter How Agencies Work

Technology is revolutionizing the decades-old agency services model that provides CMOs and brands with human expertise to create, execute, and manage marketing. Creative, digital, and media agencies are now wrestling with the possibilities and drawbacks of machine learning (ML) and robotic process automation (RPA). “You would expect agencies to be excited by automation and AI. But, ironically, an industry famous for innovation is holding back the tide,” criticizes Wesley ter Haar, founder of MediaMonks. Despite lingering dissonance, agency holding companies have invested at least $12 billion since 2014 in acquiring technology to power their martech, adtech, and data initiatives. The melding of AI and intelligent automation (IA) with agency strategy and creativity impacts every aspect of the development of marketing communications.

·        Data science seizes consumer insight. Data management platforms and agency audience activation technology produce audience insights in a fraction of the time it takes to manually gather, process, analyze, and report qualitative and quantitative research. Insights that once took days and weeks are revealed in hours. Publicis Groupe’s Epsilon PeopleCloud registers more than 178 instances daily to reach 200 million consumers, providing near-instant understanding of consumer behavior among audiences at an individual level. “Imagine unlocking all the data and insights on what audiences want, who indexes higher for certain behaviors, or who already buys in a particular category — even before starting marketing planning,” says Bryan Kennedy, CEO of Epsilon.

·        AI propels the velocity of content production. Technology has made time-intensive labor within the studio production process faster and smarter. Adobe incorporated its Sensei AI technology into Photoshop’s Lasso tool, speeding up image processing from hours to seconds. Autodesk’s photogrammetry software allows creatives to take 2D photos and rapidly convert them into detailed 3D landscapes, the capture of which used to require days of set-up work. Dentsu uses machine learning to power its CGI studios to speed up work and manage content velocity. “We’re seeing a 60% increase in content production as we leverage CGI,” says Vikalp Tandon, global chief technology officer of creative and experience business at Dentsu.

·        AI and intelligent automation push the boundaries of creative craftsmanship. Software can now assist the intuitive, human process of creative development, resulting in a “human + machine” creative team. Martech application Persado uses natural language processing, a language database, and multivariant analysis to generate multiple campaign iterations and identify the best performers. The software helps determine effectiveness, such as selecting the word “nutritious” versus “nourishing” in advertising copy. Matt McNeany, creator of Omnicom’s content platform ADZU, suggests that the volume of data and content used to train algorithms is becoming a differentiator. “Ads are better than [another agency’s ads] because the algorithms are better trained,” says McNeany.

·        AI steers media planning and buying. While legacy systems and processes for buying broadcast media persist, all the major holding companies have built audience platforms to automate much of the media planning workstream. Numerous agency audience platforms use AI to generate purchase journeys based on audience definition: Dentsu’s M1, GroupM’s mPLATFORM, Havas’s Converged, IPG’s Kinesso, Omnicom’s Omni, and Publicis’s Epsilon PeopleCloud all deliver AI-assisted planning. Similarly, myriad programmatic adtech companies and agencies provide automated bidding exchanges to buy addressable media; they include DV360, MediaMath, MightyHive, Seizmic, and The Trade Desk.

·        Bots administer agency operations. IA now aids agency operations and back offices by executing predictable, routine administrative tasks within finance, IT, and operations. Digital agency 360i has developed a program of approximately 50 bots to do just that: For example, one bot sends welcome emails to new employees and writes the ticket for IT to issue the new employee with a computer; another bot executes contracts with social media influencers. Andrea Terrassa, chief operating officer for 360i, describes removing responsibility for certain tasks from employees so they can be more strategic as “taking the robots out of the humans.”

The AI Revolution Is Part Of The Broader Disruption That Agencies Already Face

AI and intelligent automation initiatives will join several forces reshaping agencies. They are contending with:

·        An agency talent drain. The agency economic model requires agencies to adjust headcount costs thanks to fluctuating revenues resulting from decreased or stalled marketing spend. In the wake of the COVID-19 economic downturn, agencies are poised to shed 52,000 US agency jobs through 2021 and 49,000 globally among the major holding companies. Forrester’s model assumes that approximately half of these jobs will return. The agency talent drain sparks a migration of talent in-house and into the freelance economy, setting up a resource void that agency operators and CMOs must fill.

·        The advance of the in-house agency. In-house agency teams continue to claim more prominent roles within the CMO’s roster, as the in-house strategy has led to more control and efficiencies. The 2019 IHAF/Forrester In-House Leadership And Culture Survey found that 72% of organizations have insourced some marketing functions, a 68% increase over the past decade. Liberty Mutual Insurance’s in-house agency, Copper Giants, has grown to produce campaign assets across multiple channels, including all social and digital channels for its “LiMu Emu and Doug” campaign. Increasingly prominent in-house agencies force agencies to demonstrate new value.

·        Rigorous cost management. Companies impose budget cuts, scrutinize fees, elongate payment terms, and force account reviews to drive down their marketing costs. The head of digital marketing at a major US retailer said, “One question we’re asking ourselves is can we even afford an agency in this COVID-19 environment.” This persistent cost management pressures agencies to discount labor fees, restrict the scope of engagements, and allow fee negotiations to dictate the level of services.

·        Sluggish agency transformation initiatives. Agencies have been incrementally adjusting their models to better serve CMOs by simplifying their operating structures, appointing digitally savvy leaders, and acquiring data and technology assets. But the gradual transformation of the agency model hasn’t kept up with the CMO’s needs. “We simply couldn’t afford a global agency to work across every brand in our portfolio and chose instead to centralize digital media in-house,” says the digital director of a global cosmetics company. This places the onus on agencies to hasten the change inside their organizations to put clients at the center, blend creative firepower with acquired technology, and identify new compensation models.

Agencies Will Shrink In Size As They Grow In Technology

Applied to agency workflows, innovations in AI and intelligent automation will yield a long-term reduction in the size of agencies. We forecast that agencies of all types will reduce the number of human employees by at least 25% by 2032 (see Figure 1). This radical conclusion is grounded in dozens of interviews, an appraisal of the technologies that are already beginning to change how agencies work, data on the skills employed by agency jobs, and Forrester’s broader view on the future of work.

Figure 1 Agencies Will Be Much Smaller And Technology Laden By 2032

Modeling Employment Changes By Job Category Yields A Forecast Of Cannibalization

To understand the shifts in employment, we constructed four composite organizations, representing small and large creative and media agencies (see Figure 2). We broke each of these composite organizations into job categories (see Figure 3). Using data from the American Association of Advertising Agencies, we broke out each of these job categories into specific jobs and apportioned personnel in accordance with how common they are at agencies. Finally, we assessed the likelihood of cannibalization by intelligent software like AI and automation using two sources: We derived half from Oxford academics Frey and Osborne’s analysis of the likelihood of job cannibalization and half from our analysts’ scoring based on objective interviews.

Figure 2 Our Composite Organizations Rest On Size Assumptions

Figure 3 We Modeled A Variety Of Creative Agency Roles

Four Agency Segment Composites Reveal The Changing Composition Of The Workforce

From content creation to production, broadcast buying to computer sciences, global client executives to HR and finance, AI and automation will transform every level of the agency on a task-by-task basis. To help CMOs and agency execs better plan their resources, talent, and investments, we developed a composite model to guide the industry in adopting automation at a department and job level. We forecast for 2023 and to 2032 to provide for both immediate and long-term action — and to allow for strategy, planning, budgeting, and workforce development. The numbers we present here represent the composites; your individual mileage may vary, with higher or lower numbers depending on your level of investment in AI and intelligent automation. But a typical agency in each segment would look like these. Our model shows that our composite agencies will all contract in the next few years, losing 1 in 10 or more employees (see Figure 4 and see Figure 5).

·        Large creative agencies will lose 11% of jobs to automation by 2023. The changing composition of large agency workforces starts with back-office and support functions; we anticipate a finance department that’s 14% smaller, for example, led by intelligent automation and RPA investments. But core professional areas won’t escape unscathed: Production jobs will drop by 15%, led by roles like associate producer and project manager that will see parts of their jobs digitized and moved to software. Adobe Sign and Scan both leverage Sensei AI to automate processing purchase orders. Workfront’s use of AI automates resourcing and scheduling production teams. Creative jobs won’t be fully shielded, either; we see 9% fewer creatives due to scaling, automation, and assistance from smart software.

·        Small creative agencies will contract by 10%. Small creative agencies look similar to their large cousins, but they start with a much smaller employee base. We see comparably high job losses in areas like finance (13%) and production (14%). Creatives will face a slightly lower impact than at large firms, with a 7% loss; you need a minimum base of creative talent to execute this core function successfully, no matter how much software you deploy. Independent creative agency Wieden + Kennedy recently reduced its staff by approximately 11%, illustrating that that even the most creative organizations aren’t immune to automation.

·        Large media agencies will lose 11% by 2023 but the most by 2032. Large media agencies resemble large creatives in 2023, with a top-line job loss of 11%, but the details look different. Large media agencies see leading losses of 20% in media operations jobs like QA, tagging, and reconciliation, which are increasingly automated. Jobs like research, account management, and media buying and investment will see steeper-than-average declines due to intelligent software. For example, media buying is now a real-time automated task thanks to AT&T’s Xandr, Google’s DV360, The Trade Desk, and Verizon Media. Longer term, large media agencies will see the biggest contraction of 31% by 2032.

·        Small media agencies will lose 11% by 2023. Small media agencies see similar losses to their large cousins, but there is a cap on losses by 2032 of 27%. A small media agency of 150 employees would shrink to 109 over that longer time period, and some job categories — including executive, media operations, and new business/communications — would employ only one employee each, aided by large strategy and planning teams and lots of software. “In the context of AI, training the machine learning algorithms with segmented first-party data is among the best value that agency workers can add to the martech stack and media execution,” says John Faris, president of Red Door Interactive.

Figure 4 Creative Agencies Will Be Significantly Smaller By 2023

FIgure 5 Media Agencies Will Shrink By 2023

Enhance Your Workforce Strategy With Intelligent Creativity

It’s time for CMOs and agencies to move beyond an intuition-only method of creating, producing, and activating marketing and embrace a more scientific, accurate, and scalable one. Creativity — the act of applying novel solutions to elicit human responses — hasn’t changed. But the way that companies apply creativity must. “Intelligence is based on how efficient a species became at doing the things they need to survive,” wrote Charles Darwin. Evolve into the leaner, smarter agency of the future by combining human intuition with machine prowess. The result? Intelligent creativity, which Forrester defines as:

“A process of creative problem-solving in which teams of creators and strategists conceive, design, produce, and activate business solutions with the assistance of AI, intelligent automation, and data.”

CMOs and agency executives who establish intelligent creativity as their firm’s organizing principle for growth can anticipate:

·        Differentiating brands by heightening execution. AI doesn’t replace agency creativity; it improves it. AI, intelligent software, and automation give CMOs and agencies the ability to execute in volume using a deep understanding of audience interests. For example, applying intelligent creativity to media planning and operations increases both accuracy and impact. “In the future, media professionals won’t make the decision of where to place the ad, but they will set the parameters for where the tool places the ad,” says Sean Corcoran, president of Mediahub. CMOs and agencies leveraging the scale and insight of intelligent creativity will differentiate their brands and executions.

·        Delighting customers by better meeting their emotional needs. Emotional connection with consumers is core to developing a strong brand connection. AI, intelligent software, and automation go beyond efficient delivery to provide efficient understanding of consumers. Accenture Interactive describes this shift as “empathy at scale powered by creativity focused on customer needs,” explains Zach Newcomb, MD at Accenture Interactive. Brands that use intelligent creativity to better anticipate and address the emotional requirements of customers and prospects become more meaningful, relevant, and purchased.

·        Empowering employees by swapping the mundane for the fulfilling. Let’s face facts: CMOs and agency executives have a morale problem. Fortunately, AI, intelligent software, and automation take over mundane, repetitive tasks, freeing employees to focus on creative problem-solving. As Lynn Lewis, US CEO of UM, says: “Machines won’t take jobs. They’ll make them more interesting. They will take the highly monotonous and repetitive tasks, freeing up time for people to focus on higher-value, more impactful, and personally rewarding aspects of their work, resulting in more innovation and enhanced quality throughout the ecosystem.” CMOs and agency executives can use intelligent creativity to boost morale and provide employees with more rewarding career opportunities.

·        Rewarding shareholders by shaping intangible value. Companies that wield intelligent creativity deliver higher market valuations through their firm’s intangible assets, such as branding, reputation, intellectual property, and innovation. AI, intelligent software, and automation can identify the underlying opportunities that people find hard to detect. Look no further than Apple, which recently posted the first $2 trillion valuation. Or Tesla, which recently overtook Toyota as the largest automotive valuation. Or Procter & Gamble, which posted a 5% increase in organic sales during Q2 2020 while most of the globe was shut down for business due to COVID-19. CMOs and agency executives can uncover untapped economic value by tapping into intelligent creativity. CMOs must rush to capture this before their CIO counterparts beat them to it.

Transform Your Workforce To Realize Intelligent Creativity

CMOs and agency CEOs: AI and automation are now realities in the context of slashed marketing budgets, scores of layoffs, empty real estate, and societal disruptions. Take advantage of these unprecedented times to create extraordinary change. The profound possibilities of human and machine collaboration will rearchitect your industry for the next decade. Make marketing and agencies relevant again by transforming the agency workforce to deliver the benefits of intelligent creativity.

·        Reimagine how the organization works. The pandemic has already affected where we work. Turn your focus to how. “It’s an org design problem for agencies because it does require people to change what they are doing and who they are doing it with,” says Andrew Carlson, chief experience officer at Organic. Future fit organizations provide the tools, training, and support for employees to navigate the modern workplace and reach their full potential. Start by using the Forrester model to understand which roles will benefit from the inclusion of automated tools; then, build a 2023 plan for integrating AI and automation tools and adjusting headcount levels.

·        Combine human intuition with machine prowess. You can best realize creativity when you take repetitive, predictable tasks or labor-intensive tasks off the plate of human employees. They are then free to use their creative intuition to develop and test concepts. Just as stop-motion animation gave way to CGI, all aspects of creative development are improving. The first step is to map existing employee journeys; then, tap into the wellsprings of technology innovation that can improve employees’ capabilities and experiences along that journey. Alicia Enciso, CMO of Nestlé USA, describes this as added-value talent: “This change will make those jobs more interesting by focusing on opportunities to improve results while removing the boring work.”

·        Use data to inform decisions, not make them. Data is part of the answer, not the entire answer. When CMOs and agencies let data make all the decisions, customers lose out. Data-driven display advertising and retargeting have created poor advertising experiences. According to Forrester’s data, only 40% of US online adults indicate that they find advertising a useful way to learn about new products and services. Instead, let data play its role in fueling intelligence and providing a base of knowledge on which analysts, strategists, creators, and marketers can build. “Data is the new oil,” says Pete Kim, founder and CEO of MightyHive.

·        Protect the creative craft from technological doom and gloom. As AI and automation become integral to producing customer-centric strategies and campaigns, you must articulate that technology is meant to heighten creativity, not replace it. “The chief creative officer is in the idea business. We haven’t figured out how to automate that and likely never will,” jests Andrea Terrassa of 360i. Make room for human expertise in your stated AI vision so that it’s clear to all employees that your intent is to support their experience, not usurp it.

·        Prepare tomorrow’s employees before they are hired. “As we implement more and more automation, there will be a need to go back and look at the school curriculum and formalize in school what is learned on the job,” says Courtney Acuff of Ansira. The educational burden here goes beyond obvious skills like familiarity with software and AI. Tomorrow’s employees need a higher robotics quotient (RQ) — a measure of how well individuals and organizations adapt to, collaborate with, and drive results from AI, automation, and other intelligent software. High-RQ employees are continuous learners; they adapt well to the introduction of new technologies and embrace the value of human/machine collaboration.

·        Work with the contingent workforce. As agencies digitize, it becomes easier and more flexible to work with contingent talent rather than FTEs. Why? Because the future workforce will be adaptive, able to burst up or down rapidly. In the agency world — where projects start and end — this can become a superpower. To do this, agencies will tap into guru.com, talent.com, or Upwork to find specialized labor and invest in SAP Fieldglass or Beeline for software to manage contingent labor. The end result will be a low-friction cycle of acquiring, onboarding, and then offboarding contingent talent pools. And these freelancers have top skills — many of them will result from agency shrinkage — so agencies’ tech investments will create a more robust pool of contingent workers.

Humans Plus Machines Yield An Era Of Intelligent Creativity

When asked whether humans or computers will dominate future chess competitions, world champion Gary Kasparov said neither: A human with a computer will dominate both. He suggested that the machines reveal previously undetected permutations of moves — and that the “inimitable spark of human creativity and intuition” shines through to complement the computers. The future is human plus machine, not machine or human alone.

The same is true for agencies. The long-term vision of a smaller agency complemented by copious amounts of technology paints a picture of the future. In 2032:

1.      Competitive complexity and confusion will take hold. While agencies contract in size, selecting one will become more complex. Firms will find it increasingly difficult to distinguish among agencies, consultancies, systems integrators, and adtech firms — each wielding similar services and platforms. Publicis Groupe digital agency Sapient calls itself a consultancy. Technology consultancy Accenture Interactive calls itself an experience agency. Systems integrator Wipro has acquired multiple design, marketing, and digital agencies. Programmatic adtech companies like MightyHive and Amobee frequently replace or augment media agencies as companies move media in-house. CMOs will face a blur of platforms and services as they attempt to identify and divine true combinations of creativity and technology.

2.      The “human + machine” approach will reshape the agency career path. Agency experts of the future will be immersed in technology — and not just one technology but a web of different technologies addressing each stage of their employee journey. These technologies will evolve and change increasingly rapidly, reshaping jobs. To offer an analogy, Anna Wintour of Vogue will be the last editor of her kind. Condé Nast will probably over-rotate and replace her with a pure data-and-technology guru, whose lack of fashion expertise will cause them to fail. The publisher will then hire an “Anna Wintour who’s also a technology native and expert.” Future agencies must have the creative chops and the technology prowess in every employee.

3.      Clients will select agencies based on the best algorithm and data. Intelligent creativity will set off a software race among agencies for which can best wed software, data, and learning to their operational models. ML isn’t the only key technology in play, but it suffuses all others, helping agencies complete tasks more effectively and aesthetically. Agencies with better data and better algorithms — though some will be commonly sourced — will benefit, as will those with more creative subject matter experts to partner with the machines. The result? Marc Andreesen’s “software will eat the world” thesis will come to life as agencies differentiate on their software, data, and ability to reach algorithmic scale across clients.

4.      Digital labor platforms will become agents for the most talented. Matching the right talent to the right project becomes more complex in a world of ubiquitous technology. Agencies can realize economies of scale when they employ invisible resources — talent that already exists in their networks, either internally or externally, that they’ve previously had trouble discovering. The talent platforms that agency holding companies manage will become superpowers. Publicis Groupe’s MRCL has already saved 2,000 jobs during the COVID-19 pandemic by matching talent among its various agencies.

5.      High-EX, high-RQ workplaces will attract the best talent. As technology becomes a differentiator, agency talent will flow to the agencies with comparatively better technology. But making technology work requires two capabilities: employee experience (EX) and RQ. A smaller agency with better EX becomes important in a way it hasn’t before, as fewer junior people, a more malleable “Hollywood”-style labor model, and the ability to work effectively in teams all require greater EX. EX is also a driver of RQ, a measure of how well individuals and organizations collaborate with and drive business results from intelligent software.

6.      The agency economic model will shift from paying for people to paying for platforms. Intelligent creativity will result in agencies being compensated for the AI and automation they offer. This represents the first meaningful revamp of the current agency services/time compensation model in over three decades. Agencies and clients will construct a hybrid model incorporating fees for software-as-a-service (SaaS) technology and advertising algorithms. Digital agency 360i is already exploring the concept of a digital FTE. “We’re starting to ask some fundamental questions about the value an agency brings by asking ourselves, ‘Do the bots become part of the staff plan?’,” explains Doug Rozen, chief media officer at 360i. The digital FTE is but one example of agencies being paid for platforms, not just people.

7.      The term “agency” will become meaningless. The term “agency” will fall out of relevance as it will no longer adequately describe the value, expertise, and intelligence applied to client business. “Agency” developed from the practice of purchasing media on behalf of clients or, quite literally, being an agent. Tomorrow’s leaner and smarter providers will consult, explain, implement, and, above all, advise their clients on how to delight customers, differentiate brands, and empower employees while delivering shareholder value.

Supplemental Material

Forrester Agency Automation Forecast Methodology

We created four composite agency organizations based upon firmographics collected in Forrester Wave™ briefings and other agency briefings, identifying each department/work category per agency type. Using data from the American Association of Advertising Agencies (4 A’s), we broke out each agency department/work category into 90 specific jobs and apportioned personnel in accordance with how commonly they are found in agencies. We assessed the likelihood of cannibalization by intelligent software like AI and automation using two sources: We derived half from Oxford academics Frey and Osborne’s analysis of the likelihood of job cannibalization and half from our analysts’ scoring based on objective interviews. Finally, we used S-curve analysis to determine the rate of growth of automation across each agency department/work category and each job from 2020 through 2032. The information presented in this report reflects S-curve data from the forecast for 2023.

The IHAF/Forrester 2019 In-House Leadership And Culture Survey was fielded to 482 respondents comprised of IHAF members from US companies and client-side marketing professionals. Forrester and IHAF fielded the survey from July 2019 to August 2019. Respondent incentives included the opportunity to win a ticket to the IHAF Conference & Awards Show. Exact sample sizes are provided in this report on a question-by-question basis. This survey used a self-selected group of respondents and is therefore not random. This data is not guaranteed to be representative of the population, and, unless otherwise noted, statistical data is intended to be used for descriptive and not inferential purposes. While nonrandom, the survey is still a valuable tool for understanding the current state and trajectory of the in-house agency industry.

Companies We Interviewed For This Report

We would like to thank the individuals from the following companies who generously gave their time during the research for this report.

360i

Accenture Interactive

Acxiom

Adobe

Albert.ai

American Association of Advertising Agencies

Ansira

Code

Cognizant

Dentsu

Digitas

Epsilon

Hero Digital

IPG

Isobar

Kinesso

Mediahub

MediaMonks

MightyHive

MRM

Nestlé Purina

Omnicom

Omnicom Media Group

Organic

Persado

Stanley.ai

TA Digital

UM

VMLY&R

Work & Co

https://reprints2.forrester.com/#/assets/2/1343/RES160075/report


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