Wow. Just wow. Sending a brief to media owners doesn’t make you a strategist

Rachael-LonerganThis week Sydney-based strategy agency Naked Communications was fired by Labor after details of negotiations with media outlets over a Kevin Rudd interview were published by Fairfax Media. The potential deal apparently involved free advertising for Labor on the sites involved. In this guest post, Rachel Lonergan argues that the furore demonstrates that too many agencies simply rush out a brief for media owners instead of creating a strategy.

On Wednesday Jonathan Swan’s piece appeared in my Twitter feed with the headline ‘Ad agency that offered ‘exclusive’ deals for access to Kevin Rudd has been sacked’. On reading I retweeted it to my followers with my comment – “Wow. Just…wow”.

That reaction accurately describes the feedback I received from various people over the day. PR people, government comms people, and other strategy people like myself.

There are a number of flaws with the approach to the brief as was depicted in the article (read the written brief here although Fairfax alleges some of the discussions took place via email) . Now I choose my words carefully because I wasn’t there, and I’m going on what has been reported. And I’m not really interested in the ‘who’, but the ‘what’ and the ‘why’.

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