You’ve taken the leap and partnered with an outside marketing firm to help you navigate choppy and treacherous business development waters.
Maybe this is a new relationship for your company or perhaps you have outsourced your marketing before. Regardless, as you get ready to kick-off your marketing efforts, it's crucial to agree in advance on some important relationship expectations.
Agreeing in advance on expectations about meeting schedules, project timing and term definitions is crucial to moving projects forward.
While every agency-client contract is unique, and every partnership is different, you should set clear expectations in the following areas:
Face-to-face meetings are important to strong partnerships. Nothing replaces in person communication no matter how convenient the alternatives might be. Depending on your engagement (single project or on-going) you should at a minimum expect in-person kick-off meetings and major milestone meetings.
What's most important is that you are working with your marketing agency in-person at pre-established, clearly defined times during the relationship.
While in-person meetings are always highly engaging, they may not be the best use of time in certain situations. Remote meetings can be great time and money savers. Programs like GoToMeeting allow groups to meet remotely, share computer screens, make presentations and see each other’s visual reactions.
In some instances where long distances make face-to-face meetings a budget issue, more remote meetings might be required. However, as a general rule, remote meetings are best used of for:
Again, establishing the expectation of weekly and monthly status updates and how they will be handled limits surprises, improves collaboration and keeps all parties on the same page and moving forward.
In the beginning stages of any agency-client relationship it's essential to establish expectations for project delivery and review timing. During a relationship or even project kick-off meeting, it's mission critical for all parties to understand their respective responsibilities and how they fit within the overall project timeline:
No one wants a project to stall or be delayed, but it certainly happens. This is not about being able to place blame; it's about accountability and transparency so that both teams know where they stand and how projects could be impacted.
Defining what “delivery” of the project or campaign means at the beginning of a partnership can save some serious headaches down the road. Consider the following:
Each agency contract could define "delivered" in a different manner. If the term "deliverable" is not clearly spelled out in your contract with the agency, ask them to clarify what it means. If you see things you don't like, talk about and negotiate contract changes. No one likes confusion and the last thing your agency partner wants is to withhold products from you that you have rightly paid for.
Client-agency relationships are highly complex, just like the individuals involved. Define expectations early. Communicate them clearly. And then hit the ground running.
If you're looking for a marketing agency partner, we'd love to talk. Contact us today.