PLANNERS: ARE THEY IMPORTANT?

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There’s been a bit of debate about Planning that has grown on the ‘Forever is overrated’ post. Here are some of them that should keep the particular discussion on Planning going….

Anonymous said…

Love it.

But on another note, anyone else having problems with their planners?

I’d like to know why they have so much control over the creative process. Once the brief is approved they should leave it to the creatives to do their jobs.

But time and time again they’re running the show. The problems is not getting your ad through your Creative Director, it’s getting it approved by planning.

Planners. The new Client.

Please explain?

10:22 AM

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Anonymous said…

epkpi10:22 does raise a good point about planners. I have tried to go along with them but I seriously cant see the value in it. They just provide a time wasting and frustrating layer of bullshit. Even worse they all seem so desperate to hang in your office and be “part of the gang”. Even worse again when they move into the creative dept! WTF?!

8:54 PM

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Anonymous said…

Re 8:54pm’s comments about Planners, it is you who is talking bulshit. Planners should be a part of the creative dept as planners are a critical part of the process of GOOD advertising. Planners uncver the insights that give direction to advertising, making good ideas great ideas. There is a direct corelation between the recent upswing in Australian advertising and the involvement of planners in the creative process.

8:16 AM

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Anonymous said…

sorry. not very good. i don’t care if Glue worked on it and so did some ex-Patts folk. The ad doesn’t make much sense.

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Anonymous said…

8:16 AM…Ah don’t tell me, you’re a planner?

10:25 AM

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Anonymous said…

Planner’s – also known as support staff

5:14 PM

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Anonymous said…

The only really good planner I’ve ever come across was a creative who crossed over. Unfortunately, all the others were average AE’s who really wanted to be CDs. Most of them do good jargon and not much else. As for Fling, it seems to an insight-free zone. (LIke 99% of the stuff we all produce.)

11:50 AM

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Anonymous said…

OMG 11:50am, we’ve just had the announcement that a failed account guy is moving into Planning at our agency. And the freaking Planning Dept has just moved into the middle of the Creative Dept. Most of them were already hanging in our offices way too much – now it’ll be worse than ever. On the bright side though, it is funny watching them try and retro-fit their mumbo jumbo to great concepts when the outcome so cleary did not “spring” from a planning “insight”.

8:00 PM

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Anonymous said…

8pm… Retro fit to great concepts? Where are they then? Why are there so many crap ads on this blog? Oh it must be the planners fault… Err hang on

12:24 PM

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Anonymous said…

Planners are just another one of those clever ideas agencies invented to convince clients they were worth hiring: “See, we’ve got this new specialist who will do all your thinking for you.” Clients generally love planners because their only real specialty is taking a client’s dumb thinking and selling it back to him in neat marketing jargon. Always looks great on the overheads; always contributes zero to the actual content of the ads. They just give the rest of account service a great excuse for doing even less thinking.

10:05 PM

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Anonymous said…

Good planners help.

Crap planners hinder.

There aren’t many good planners around.

The problem isn’t with the planning function, it’s with the quality of the people doing the job.

Advertising fails to attract enough high calibre people. Tight margins, long hours, the indignities of working in a service industry… if you had a double degree from a good university and were smart enough to discover insights that could make a real difference to the life of a brand – would you really choose to work in the advertising industry?

Some do, but most don’t.

9:44 AM

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Anonymous said…

If any one actually thought about this, for a second, and tried to not be a childish “creative” then they would see what utter nonsense, they are talking. One of the most awarded ads ever, is Honda “grrr”, if you look at the wklondon site you will see just how much credit is given to their planners who have co-ordinated a very ordinary client into an extraordinary body of work. Even in our fair shores, planning and account startegy have produced the thinking behind the big ad, which would never have been possible without work put in by the planners. In Australia there is so much emphasis on ads and no real thought behind campaignable, sustainable ideas. Saatchis work especially lacks a clear direction for any of their work and it suffers accordingly, why for instance are there now two tooheys ads which are not even linked by the same end line. The fox sports work is all over the shop, and Toyota is only linked by a jump universally panned by creatives, directors and the overseas client.

Planning at it’s most simple would see these faults immediately and try and correct them.

12:25 PM

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my gut feeling said…

Some Planners are great. They’re passionate about contributing to the process around developing brilliant ideas and they do this by researching and understanding the consumer, then sharing that information with the broader team through a well-written brief. But they don’t presume to be the concept developers. And they don’t presume to come up with the
conceptual creative insight. They provide an understanding of the consumer and the context for the work.

Other Planners, bad Planners, wait for the creative department to come up with the idea, then post-rationalise it into a strategy which they pretend was theirs to begin with. And in doing this they appear to have derived the conceptual insight – making it seem like the creative department simply brought their idea to life through the execution. But they also do it to safeguard a job that is only tenuously connected to the actual ideation process and creative product – which is the future of our industry. At the end of the day that’s what we’re all selling. And so, naturally, that’s the one indispensable commodity moving forward. Hence the emergence of this new and dishonest representation of planning – both within agencies and as external consultancies – as the idea originators.

And subsequently, as this new delineation of the Planner’s role is propagated within marketing circles (because a new role/additional service from an agency equals an opportunity to ask the client for more money), the function of Planning has to live up to the new, perceived role that it has in the creative process. Which means that we are headed toward a future where Planners are expected to crack the thought / insight / idea – and the creative department is just expected to execute it.

Sound familiar?

But we can’t just blame the Planners.

If you take a look at the Planning Awards you will find that Planners are awarded for the amount of influence they had over the idea. They are encouraged to claim ownership of the concept development if they want to further their careers and/or just keep their jobs. Please, have a look at the APG Planning Awards website and the criteria in the call-for-entries. Last year on the CB Blog Christine Blackburn, chair of the APG Creative Planning Awards, said: “We’re very proud of the body of work presented at the second APG Creative Planning Awards. The planners have uncovered some fantastic insights and applied their craft to bring these insights to life in many different mediums”.

This is where the delineation of concept development is heading.

Our industry is putting pressure on Planners to develop something they’re not trained or hired to develop. Conceptual thoughts. Ideas. Which leads to dishonesty and appropriation. But we Creatives are often too consumed within our own bubble to realise what is going and how that will affect our own job in the long term. Which is a big oversight on our part. Because as the role of Planning takes shape, so too does the future role of Creative. So lets make sure we all like where we’re headed – before it’s too late for us to change it. The APG Planning Awards are only in their second year. Read through the entry criteria. Find out if your agency is entering your work. If they are, find out who will be taking credit for the thinking / the creative insight / the idea. And if it’s a slimy mess of dishonest lies SAY SOMETHING to your CD, CEO and Planners. If your Planners are post-rationalising your ideas into strategies, then entering them into Planning Awards to take ownership over the idea, you really need to speak up.

http://www.accountplanninggroup.com.au/public/content/ViewCategory.aspx?id=139

If we can stop Planners from appropriating the ideas, we can fix the current perception of the Planner’s role in the creative process and all the problems that lie therein.

12:26AM