Skip to content
Creative Review
  • About / Buy
  • Inspiration
  • Podcast
Primary MenuLogin / Register
In-House Agency Leaders Club
Sponsored content

Why in-house agencies’ ambitions are growing

To achieve their goal of being seen as lead agencies, in-house creative agencies need to fill gaps in strategy, planning and process

By Patrick Burgoyne

In-house agencies (IHAs) are evolving, with an ambition to achieve lead agency status for their businesses. But they are being held back by poor internal processes, a lack of strategy as a discipline, and the challenges of transitioning from being seen as a service provider to being recognised as a strategic partner.

For the first time, leaders of in-house agencies in the UK and EMEA have shared their challenges, priorities and ambitions for the future in a unique survey conducted by the In-House Agency Leaders Club. Almost 50 major brands took part in the IHALC In-House Agency Benchmarking Survey, including The Body Shop, Channel 4, Citi, Three, BP, Reckitt and Specsavers.

AMBITIOUS IN-HOUSE AGENCIES ARE EVOLVING

As confidence in their capabilities grows, IHAs are evolving, with almost 60% of IHAs working on above-the-line advertising. When IHALC asked IHAs to classify themselves as one of four broad agency types – production studio, creative studio, creative agency and lead agency – 57% self-identified as creative agencies with the capability of originating and developing campaigns, while just 15% saw themselves as lead agencies today.

However, almost 50% said that their ambition was to achieve lead agency status in future, where the IHA would be devising campaign and brand strategy and originating big campaign ideas for its brands.

WHAT’S HOLDING THEM BACK?

The data shows us that IHAs want to be known for their creativity above all else, and see raising the standard of their creative work as their number one priority. However, the survey reveals significant gaps in both the capabilities and processes needed to achieve this.

The absence of strategy capability is the most glaring issue – only 35% currently have any kind of planning function and only 22% having a strategy director. Unsurprisingly, IHAs report significant challenges with briefing (54% of IHA leaders scored marketing 4/10 or less for the quality of their briefs).

While communication between IHAs and marketers is generally good, as is collaboration, poor quality feedback and marketers’ lack of understanding of the creative process are also an issue. Only 40% of IHAs have client services or account management in place.

Operational issues compound the problem. Work produced is, in the majority of IHAs, not tracked, not costed, and not effectively governed. There are high volumes of ad-hoc or reactive work. It’s no wonder then that IHAs report their biggest barrier to doing better work as ‘a lack of time/forward planning’.

Image: IHALC

EXTERNAL PARTNERS ARE STILL ESSENTIAL

While many IHAs have the ambition to be doing more tier 1 conceptual creative work, external agency partners remain a vital part of the mix with 82% of IHAs turning to them for above-the-line campaign creative. IHAs mostly look to external agencies for access to skills and talent, to provide a fresh perspective and for their knowledge and expertise.

Most (63%) see external agencies as partners rather than rivals and feel that they collaborate well with them: “We work in total partnership with our external agency, developing and producing campaigns as one team,” one IHA leader said.

So while the IHA-external agency relationship is often characterised as an ‘either/or’, with the IHA cast as a threat to the external agency world, success would appear to lie in effective collaboration. Each IHA will have its own ever-evolving recipe for the right mix of in-house and external capability.

Image: IHALC

BETTER UNDERSTANDING = BETTER WORK

While IHAs told IHALC that their main priority for the year ahead was ‘raising creative standards’, ‘improving relationships with brief owners/stakeholders’ was a very close second. Just behind that came ‘improving effectiveness’, ‘improving processes’ and ‘reputation building’. Only 29% cited ‘reducing costs’ as one of their main priorities.

These are all inter-related essentials for success and growth. Better processes will help improve the effectiveness of the type of work that the IHA currently does. Improving relationships with business unit heads and brief-owners, listening to them, understanding their challenges and identifying opportunities to solve them, can open up the chance to take on additional ‘stretch’ projects which go beyond what the business might think the IHA is currently capable of. Making a success of those builds the reputation of the agency and creates the virtuous circle that can secure the buy-in, resource and confidence to evolve the IHA and its remit.

Every IHA is different, tailored to meet the needs of its business. But the survey reveals a desire to evolve and grow what IHAs are capable of. Successful IHA leaders are great advocates for their agencies, making its case every day, winning over colleagues and unlocking the potential that IHAs undoubtedly have. In their hands, in-house agencies have an exciting future ahead.

Download the full IHALC In-House Agency Benchmarking Survey report here

For more on in-house agencies, visit Creative Review’s dedicated content hub sponsored by the In-House Agency Leaders Club, The In-House Life

Sponsored content Digital The In-House Life

Latest from CR

A man with braided hair wearing a blue Stone Island jacket and hat sat in a studio environment, shown on the Stone Island homepage

How Stone Island is using design to look forward

30/08/2024 9:00 am
Specsavers' logo appears upside down

Specsavers disrupts pre-movie trailers with a series of mishaps

30/08/2024 9:00 am
A person sat in an armchair and another person lounging on a mustard sofa in a wood panelled room, both gazing ahead into the distance

Gregory Crewdson’s lifelong study of suburban America

29/08/2024 8:00 am
Barry Keoghan stands in Manchester United kit

Unravelling adland’s obsession with 90s nostalgia

29/08/2024 8:00 am

Labneh brand Bezi launches with a richly textured identity

29/08/2024 8:00 am
Fontaines DC album art XL Recordings

Building the visual world of Fontaines DC

28/08/2024 10:00 am
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

More from CR

A man stands naked with micky mouse hands in a red room
Creative Inspiration

Johnny Hardstaff on getting intimate with photography

The director reflects on the connection between his darkly personal photography work and his commercial films, and how the former has enriched his wider practice

20/08/2024 8:18 am
Creative Leadership

Dada Projects founder on the visibility of women in digital design

Founder and creative director Christina Worner talks to CR about the motivations behind setting up the design studio and what she’s doing to creative a supportive environment for anyone who works with them

15/08/2024 7:11 am
Jack Wimmer Wizardry Design Studio
Creative Insight

Why brands can’t be everything everywhere all at once

The purpose of brand strategy is to provide brands with direction and meaning. So why are agencies and marketers so eager to keep brands open-ended?

14/08/2024 7:01 am
Close up of blue cheese with the words One Eight One laid over it in the new Fortnum & Mason serif typeface
Creative Inspiration

Fortnum & Mason reveals first ever bespoke typeface family

Two new typefaces promise a more digitally-friendly brand presence, visual cohesion, and legibility

07/08/2024 8:31 am
Duolingo Katherine Chan
Creative Insight

Duolingo on why brands are becoming more human

We speak to Duolingo’s global head of social media Katherine Chan about managing the team behind its lauded social strategy and how people’s perceptions of brands are shifting in the era of individual clout

08/08/2024 7:28 am
David Meet Marina Prieto
Creative Leadership

Teenage kicks: how the David ad network is growing up

We talk to co-founder Fernando Musa about how the network is evolving with age, plus how he balances his unusual dual roles as chairman at David and CEO at Ogilvy Brazil

07/08/2024 8:30 am
Still from a Libresse ad featuring a small felt puppet in the shape of a uterus
Creative Inspiration

Libresse ad calls for better period education

The mixed media ad by AMV BBDO illustrates how a lack of knowledge about periods can be a lifelong issue

01/08/2024 9:08 am
Creative Insight

What can brands learn from Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign?

CR speaks to Teemu Suviala, global chief creative officer at Landor, about how Harris is cutting through the political noise, and what lessons brands can take from her bold approach

01/08/2024 9:06 am

Creative Review

Search
Sign in or register
Close
  • Subjects
    • Annual Awards 2024
    • Advertising
    • Graphic design
    • Branding
    • Photography
    • Illustration
    • Film & TV
    • Gaming
    • Art
  • Series
    • Podcast
    • Inspiration
    • Insight
    • Process
    • Leadership
    • The Monthly Interview
    • Advice
    • Exposure
    • New Talent
  • Writers
    • Eliza Williams
    • Aimée McLaughlin
    • Rebecca Fulleylove
    • Megan Williams
    • More Contributors
  • More
    • About
    • Subscribe to Creative Review
    • Work with us
    • Sign up to newsletter
    • Contact us
    • Creative Review Archive
    • Subscription FAQs
    • Magazine stockists
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Contact
  • Cookies
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe
  • Subscription FAQs
  • Website Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2024 Centaur Media plc and / or its subsidiaries and licensors. All rights reserved.

Built by Standfirst

Xeim Limited, Registered in England and Wales with number 05243851
Registered office at Floor 14, 10 York Road, London, SE1 7ND