Filed under: A Bit Of Inspiration, Advertising, Attitude & Aptitude, Authenticity, Comment, Creativity, Culture, Effectiveness, Emotion, Empathy, Insight, Management, Marketing, Planners, Planning, Point Of View, Relevance, Resonance

OK, I should start this post by saying I have only physically been in the company of Matt Tanter twice in my life, so I appreciate there is a chance I may be bombarded by people writing in and saying, “you’re wrong Rob, he’s a massive dick”.
But I doubt it.
Not because I think how people behave with me represents how they behave with everyone – and even if that was the case, they’d be likely act with me much worse than they would act with anyone else – but because of what he hasn’t done.
He has a big job at Mother.
He’s part of big campaigns for big clients.
He used to be the chair of the UK Account Planning Group.
And yet, while many would may let these achievement go to their head and act like they’re hot shit, Matt doesn’t. Quite the opposite in fact.
He doesn’t big himself up.
He doesn’t enter mindless twitter spats.
He doesn’t act like he has intellectual superiority.
He doesn’t do any of those things, instead he just gives a shit .. for his family … his team … and people in general.
Now I appreciate some may read this and think “what a wimp” … because for the industry likes to paint anyone who doesn’t spend every waking minute thinking about making ads as possessing some fatal flaw.
Obviously this is utterly stupid.
Not just because the standard of work out there means anyone spending every waking minute thinking about making ads is not making the work culture wanst to spend every waking minute watching, reading or tapping … but also because in my experience, the very best in the biz all seem to share one particular trait.
A love of seeking, understanding and learning from what’s going on outside the small bubble of adland.
Doesn’t matter what it is.
Doesn’t matter where it is.
Doesn’t matter who it involves.
They understand all of it contributes to their ability to make work that can shape culture rather than just adds to the cultural landfill so many brands are intent on polluting the World with.
Which leads to another trait the best in the biz all seem to have.
Being great people who are also very talented.
I cannot emphasise how important this is.
Because while these people are fierce about the standards of the work being made and hungry to push and provoke boundaries and limitations – rather than just wanting to be ‘liked’ by clients and colleagues alike – they find a way to bring people on the journey with them rather than just make it all about them.
Oh there’s loads of those others types too, but people like Matt help you grow rather than just be used up and for that, we should be celebrating them.
I have seen this first hand throughout my career.
Matt could talk himself up.
Matt should celebrate what he has done for the Mother planning team – because it’s ace.
But he doesn’t and he won’t.
Because Matt is a much better human than me.
God, what a prick, hahaha.
Filed under: A Bit Of Inspiration, Attitude & Aptitude, Brand Suicide, Comment, Corporate Evil, Culture, Marketing, Marketing Fail

Monday.
God it’s hard isn’t it.
If this is the point of the week where you have the most energy, how the hell will you be feeling on Wednesday?
Well I’m going to help you with that.
I’m going to give you a surge of energy that will see you through.
And that energy is going to be created through anger.
Remember last week how I wrote about McKinsey and their moral compass free attitude towards making cash?
That they thought nothing of putting in proposals that allowed their client to continue killing people as long as they made money?
Well, I guess there was a small chance that someone could say it was all a mistake. A misunderstanding. A misquote.
OK, so no one really thinks that, but I may have been willing to give them the benefit of the doubt.
OK, I wasn’t … because there was no way they ‘made a mistake’.
McKinsey doesn’t make those.
Every single thing they do is deliberate.
Everything.
Thought out. Considered. Evaluated. Proposed.
Their driving force is optimising profit. For themselves as much as their client – especially as they never execute what they recommend to clients. Implication free advice … morally, ethically and, in some cases, legally.
And why am I being so harsh?
Because of this:

Nothing highlights McKinsey’s knowledge of what they did – and what they didn’t do – than shredding files in relation to their client.
A long time ago there was a book called The Corporation. In it, the author argued that corporations are basically psychopaths on a relentless quest for money and power.
It’s literally why McKinsey are in business.
Who else would want to work with a company that charges huge amounts for work they don’t execute that encourages illicit or even illegal behaviour? And yet so many of the companies that work with them go on about their ‘purpose’, their ‘focus on the community’.
While there are exceptions, Joel Bakan – the author of The Corporation – was generally absolutely correct in his judgement.
When Arthur Anderson was caught shredding the files of the illegal work they did for Enron, their reputation was so tainted that they went bankrupt. That McKinsey continues to walk around like the Masters of the Universe should make you furious.
Absolutely furious.
And with that, you now have the energy to get through your week.
You’re welcome.
Filed under: A Bit Of Inspiration, Advertising, Agency Culture, Attitude & Aptitude, Authenticity, Comment, Creative Development, Creativity, Culture, Effectiveness, Fake Attitude, Management, Marketing, Marketing Fail, Michael Mann, Professionalism, Resonance, Teamwork

Teamwork.
A word used so much, by so many, to ironically control others into doing what they want them to do. It’s often got far more in common with production line subserviency than teamwork.
Then there’s the other version.
Where people spout teamwork with a big smile on their face while openly trying to fuck others over so they look better to the people who matter most. The boss, for example.
But what is even worse is when people are called out for not being a team player simply because they have a different opinion.
The great irony is they’re not doing it to be a pain or problematic or to express an ego. It’s to try and offer a viewpoint they think may help get an even better outcome so literally everyone wins.
But no.
They’re criticised, belittled, undermined and made to feel like they’re the problem.
Of course teamwork is important.
It can make a huge difference to the end result.
An exponential difference.
But to do that it’s not simply telling people to practice teamwork.
It’s about having the right people in the mix – by discipline, standards and character. It’s about ensuring everyone has clarity on what they’re all working towards beyond their individual discipline. It’s about ensuring everyone knows what is expected of them and how that works in relation to those around them. It’s about giving them the freedom to use their talent to push the standards and capabilities of what they are responsible for creating, while remaining true to the overall goal everyone is working towards achieving.
I learnt that last bit from the film director Michael Mann.

I found myself with him in a meeting so asked him how he makes films given the amount of different people and disciplines involved.
He told me he starts every project by sitting with the entire production team and explaining his vision for his movie.
The story he wants to make.
What is really important to him.
What he wants people to feel watching it.
He then added this vital element:
“I want everyone to use their talent to make this film better than I could imagine. But it’s has to be my vision of the film. Not one they think I should be making.”
I love that. I love it because his version of teamwork is encouraging everyone to play up to a standard rather than down to a tick box. Which all goes to show that real teamwork is so much more than just sticking a bunch of random people and companies in a room and expecting them to “be a team”.
But that’s what so many companies and managers do.
Either because they’re lazy or just want overall control.
Once upon a time a very good friend of mine went into his annual review.
He had done incredibly well and was hoping he would be recognised for it.
Instead he was bollocked …
Bollocked for having opinions.
Bollocked for asking questions.
Bollocked for not being a ‘team player’.
He listened patiently before replying with what is still the best fuck you, power play I’ve ever heard to that accusation.
“Oh I’m a team player …”, he said, “… I’m just the captain of the team”.
Forever proving – as the pic at the top of this post shows – that as much as people may try to tell you otherwise, there is most definitely an ‘I’ in team.
Legend.


Filed under: A Bit Of Inspiration, Advertising, Attitude & Aptitude, Comment, Confidence, Context, Creativity, Culture, Diversity, Egovertising, Emotion, Empathy, Equality, Experience, Fulfillment, Legend, Management, Perspective, Relevance, Resonance, Standards
I’m reading and hearing more and more people position themselves as some sort of elite force … because the pain, hardship and obstacles others face, didn’t affect them.
Except – as the tweet by Daniel above shows – it did.
It’s happening everywhere.
From that prick Piers Morgan claiming he is in someway responsible for the brilliant achievement of Emma Raducanu through to certain members of the marketing community who acknowledge there’s many barriers people face in the industry, but then add how they were still able to succeed … unsubtly insinuating their talent is so exceptional, they got to the top despite all the obstacles others say “holds them back”, conveniently ignoring the fact they’re white, educated to hell and privileged as fuck.
I’m over it.
There’s so many people out there who face challenges the majority of us will never appreciate.
Never understand.
And while that doesn’t mean the achievements of anyone should be dismissed, the assumption that everyone is playing by the same rules and contexts is total bullshit.
Which is why those who put others down by saying ‘they faced challenges and they turned out alright’ are missing the point … both in terms of the effect their actions and behaviours had on their wellbeing and the definition of what success has to be.
We’re all fighting demons and challenges only we know about.
So by all means be proud of what you’ve done, but don’t use that to then backhandedly dismiss the achievements of others – especially when they’re not really comparable in terms of context, category or celebration.
Past or present.
Have a great weekend.