a16z Podcast - a16z Podcast: How to Manage a PR Agency
Episode Date: September 27, 2018with Shannon (Stubo) Brayton (@sstubo), Margit Wennmachers (@wennmachers), and Sonal Chokshi (@smc90) One of the company building topics that’s surprisingly mystifying is PR -- and only surprising s...ince so much of the strategy and tactics behind public relations are actually hidden from public view. We've tried demystifying the topic in an ongoing series, covering everything from "the why, how, and when" of PR" and leaders building a personal brand to crisis communications. But the most frequently asked question startup founders, especially technical ones, have is how to manage a PR agency -- from when to bring one in and the mechanics of onboarding and engaging with them; to key acronyms to know in the process of doing so (what's an AoR? RFP? GA?); to what are the ideal configurations for the who-what-where of in-house vs. agency PR. So this episode of the a16z Podcast provides perspectives from both sides of the table (in-house vs. agency, big company vs. startup) for what it takes, featuring PR legends and veterans Shannon (Stubo) Brayton, chief marketing officer at LinkedIn (formerly at OpenTable and formerly vice president of corporate communications at eBay) and Margit Wennmachers, operating partner at Andreessen Horowitz who heads up the marketing function (and who co-founded and later sold The Outcast Agency), in conversation with Sonal Chokshi. It's not dictation -- whether from company to agency, or agency to reporter, or PR to internal stakeholders -- there's a lot of strategic thinking involved even with seemingly incidental things. And... it's a leap of faith.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everyone, welcome to the A6 and Z podcast. I'm Sonal. We talk about everything from tech trends to company building on this podcast. But one of the company building topics that's surprisingly mystifying is PR, since so much of the strategy and tactics behind public relations are actually hidden from public view. So today we cover the frequently asked question of how to manage a PR agency, from when to bring one in and the mechanics of onboarding and engaging with them, to key acronyms to know in the process of doing so,
to what are the ideal configurations for the who, what, and where of in-house versus agency PR.
Joining us to have this conversation, we have Margat Wenmockers,
operating partner at Andreessen Horwitz, who oversees A6&Z's marketing function,
which includes brand and communications among many other things.
Before that, she co-founded and sold the Outcast Agency,
which worked with some of the now-biggest internet companies, then startups,
and continues to work with leading tech companies today.
And then we have Shannon Brayton, who is the chief marketing officer at LinkedIn.
She has worked in-house in corporate communications at several prominent internet companies, including OpenTable, which later IPOed, and formally served as vice president of corporate communications at eBay.
Together, Shannon and Margut provide perspectives from both sides of the table, in-house versus agency, big company versus startup, for what it takes to manage PR.
By the way, you can find more background on other topics touched on in this episode, including PR 101, Crisis Communications, and building a personal brand.
in our podcast series, you can look under public relations tag.
But this conversation begins by quickly recapping the why of PR.
The first voice you'll hear after mine is Shannon's, followed by Margins.
So how do you guys actually answer the question of do they even need an agency or not in the first place?
Well, I always start with what are you trying to achieve.
So if you are there because you're trying to get users, PR is not the only lever.
You should be pulling, obviously.
But if you are trying to get funding or you're trying to get acquired or you're trying to get someone else's attention,
PR is a good lever to pull, but you don't necessarily need an agency to do that.
Right.
So it all depends on the objective.
Yeah.
And if it's early stage, PR can be very helpful because it makes everything else easier.
Right.
So it makes hiring easier.
It makes fundraising easier.
It makes everything easier.
But there's almost never a direct correlation with it's like, I did this, the interview in fortune, and therefore I got these customers.
It's just not how it works.
So you're saying it's valuable, but there's not necessarily.
direct immediate. It's a leap of faith on a spreadsheet. It's a leap of faith. Yeah, exactly.
I think the biggest tip I give people that ask me about this is don't expect to hire an agency
and get results immediately, just like all of a sudden. You actually need to invest in the
relationship both ways. The closer I've brought an agency, the better the results. The more
I keep them at an arm's length, the results just completely go downhill. And then the expectations
and the relationship just starts to sour. But I have a question about this, because honestly, like,
I'm a founder and I'm busy trying to build a
freaking company for God's sake. And in the beginning
you're doing like 20 things at once, wearing 20 hats.
I don't have the time
to manage an agency. Like, isn't the point
of outsourcing it to just not think about it?
And agencies ideally
managed not by the founder
because as a CEO,
you've lots of things to do, right? Like you're
growing company or probably managing engineering
still. Like there's a lot of things to do.
So ideally, you have someone
with a lot of input from
you who will
help the agency be successful in the other way around. And so, yes, you do weekly phone calls and
you share a list and like this and that and the other. But it's like, okay, the building,
the camaraderie and sort of the investment together. The agency can only tell the stories that
they know, right? So if you are the founder that has that gene and understands like, oh,
this will be interesting to Wired, that will be interesting to tech crunch. This is not interesting
at all, which almost nobody can do. Like, that's just a, this is not a gift.
that you have that skill. So then if you don't, then you need to let that team in so they can
discover the stories and tell them for you. And then they do all of the story finding the fact,
finding the backup, like who needs to tell the story and all of them. And then they figure out
how to map a particular idea to a particular person at a particular outlet who would be
interested in that. And building the story is not, oh, hi, I'm going to call you and I'm going to
tell you the story, and then you're going to tell the reporter, bringing the person into your
world and letting them help find it, experience your culture, get to know you a little bit better,
that's going to make the story much richer. Yeah, it's not dictation. There has to be a story.
There has to be some tension. Who is well suited to tell the story. What kind of proof point do you
need, if any, right? So that's what a tip number one, right? You have to be willing to invest
in the relationship. So there's a real dance I'm hearing, but quite frankly, what I'm also hearing
a little bit of and just disillusion me of this is why would I even bother outsourcing this? Why not just
hire someone in-house. Like, why do all this work? If you're saying it's not dictation,
they should be able to discover. It's totally legit. I mean, like, I don't think Apple has really
used PR agencies. There are models where you don't have an agency at all. What we should do
is dissect, like, how would you divide and conquer? Like, who's good at what? If you're
internal, you probably are, you have more of your time is often consumed with, like, talking to the
product managers and figure out what the roadmap is, right? And like doing all that and like finding the
stories, making sure that everything moves forward, do all those meetings, right? And you don't have
any of that when you're on the agency side, right? Your time is taken up with talking to reporters
all the time because you have multiple clients. So as a result, you know stories that are
kind of outside of scope. And that's interesting to a client where it's like, you know, I'd be good
for me to know if Wired is doing a cover story on AI. So you're saying an agency in that context,
that person has the time to really keep their tabs on what the reporters are doing all the time.
Yeah, essentially.
Two things I think when it works really, really well.
So one is when you've got way more program dollars to spend and you'd rather do that than bring on a head count, which is much more of a fixed cost.
So a CFO, actually, a conversation with the CFO is typically, oh, an agency sounds like a great model instead of hiring three people that may be very, very hard to manage and then potentially have to exit at some point.
Number two, if you've got, you get the phone call, hey, we're going to launch in India.
But we're actually not going to put an office there or a country manager and we just need some arms and legs on the.
ground, that works beautifully to be able to find an agency in the network and call up and say,
we really need your help with Project A. And if it works out, we'd love to keep you on.
So that's more speciality type thing. You can dial up and down. And so I was particularly like,
you know, once you're really established high growth company, you want to grow the team,
you want all of that. But like when you're not in that stage, an agency can be super, super
effective. So I hear the thing on that specialties may vary and that some of the media relationships
may vary. But are you also guys saying then that people should outsource their media relationships
to their agency or do the in-house people also still invest?
Like how you sort of divvy that bit up?
I think it really depends on who's got the relationship.
And there should not be pride of ownership.
No.
If the agency has a better relationship, like in Margaret's case at Outcast,
they probably had way better relationships with reporters than half their clients.
The client has to be willing to say,
Margaret, I'm fine with you calling Quentin Hardy.
I don't need to do that.
And not having that conflict of interest between the two,
it should really be who's ever got the best relationship.
Right.
And at the same time, I think it's really important for
internal folks to be talking to the press because you kind of lose touch what is even a good story
what are they thinking like what what what's kind of in the water and not knowing that at all
it is just really detrimental however do you need to be booking all of the appointments or do you
need to be working on every story probably not right so it's a balance and the internal team too gets a lot
on other companies by talking to reporters directly too if they build the relationship some
information about other companies and what's happening in the valley and the industry, just Intel
in general. And so I think you don't want to ever have the agency team do all of it at the
exclusion of the in-house team. They should have their own. It's like you're basically not
outsourcing your insights and your connections, but you are trying to scale what you do and
leverage where you don't have specialties, etc. Without potentially fixed costs. I remember being in
situations where the reporter won't tell the company directly like what's up, but they'll tell you
You're the inconvenient messenger.
I'm like a conduit.
And then on the client side sometimes, sometimes it's really nice to have an agency walk in and deliver a particular message versus you do.
I've actually heard the best definition of consulting in general is that they're the people who will say what the internal people think all along but just don't get across.
This is why I love having agencies do media training too because agencies can really tell a CEO, actually you look like a complete dweeb or this message completely did not resonate where the employee sometimes has a hard.
time landing that message. So we've been talking so far about common configurations for working with
an agency, like having an in-house and an agency. Let's switch and talk about timing. When should you
bring an agency in or not? Now, one assumption, maybe this is a good assumption I've heard,
is that a lot of times in the very early days of a startup, at least, you don't have any hires.
You just need to get launch an announcement out. Is that the time to bring an agency in or should you
be trying to hire? I think an agency to come in at the very beginning and talk about the
company's narrative and what are your value props? What are your market fit and who are the people
running this company? Super, super valuable to have an agency help you do that without having to
hire someone at the outset. I totally agree. One thing that I've learned in working with a lot of
startups is that you need to like strip all the language that we are used to because they can't
hear it. So, so for example, CEO will call and say like, we're launching soon. We need to have
an agency, you know, like can you arrange the launch? And then
Oftentimes people say, like, well, first thing we need to do is we need to do a messaging,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And they just hear like, blah, blah, blah, dollars. And none of
that means anything to you. Try to work backwards from where the CEO is. Okay, so when is the product
ready, you know, it's all different, whether it's consumer enterprise, right? Like, and work back from there
and go like, well, if you want to get, have your launch date be that, that means you'd have to be on
the road doing interviews then. And then before that, just kind of meet them where they are and
try to strip out all the technical lingo out of the thing because that's like it's like engineer talk
it goes back to starting with what the goal is right and one of the things i'll ask people to at the
at the outset is what is your desired headline let's like think about your dream cover story
what does that say and what is the headline and then you get a really good view into what's going
on when you ask about the absolute dreaded headline because you can actually glean what is
potentially underneath that you're not necessarily being told isn't that a little bit dangerous also
for them, though, in terms of mixed messages, because a lot of founders, especially those who haven't
done communications and marketing before, they assume that, oh, I'm going to say this. This is the
truth. This is a message. There is no variation from this. It's like logic, not story, which has
multiple flavors of interpretation. Well, so what you would do is, like, you basically are taking
them on the journey with you, right? If they say, like, I want the headline to be, like,
we have the best search engine technology on the planet. And you're like, okay,
Well, then how, like, what would the reporter need to come to that conclusion, right?
And so then you walk, again, you walk backwards with them where you have them go substantiate the story.
And then if you can't, then you'll discover, you'll discovering that together, right?
You don't commit to the headline, but you basically say, if this is the type of story you want, here's all the stuff I'm going to need to be true in order to help you go back.
And don't trust an agency ever that will promise you a headline or a story or any kind of outcome.
So how does the life cycle of a company look?
And if you could set up an ideal model, is there an ideal model?
So, like, an example, you're basically an established person with an established career in Silicon Valley.
And all you want to do is, you know, put out something that you're working on something.
So you get an inflow of, like, talent and, you know, investors knocking on the door and whatnot.
And you just want to be very efficient about it.
You probably have a relationship with a reporter and you, I don't pick up the phone,
or sign it to someone. You do this one story and off you go. And then you go back into stealth and you're done. Like, you don't really need an agency.
And what would the next inflection point be to bring in an agency again or to have one on a regular basis?
I'd say a huge influx of media inquiries coming to you because then you realize actually this is getting out there and we're not controlling the story.
So I think if you're getting, you know, five to ten a month, you're probably at a point where you may need an agency to help you manage through that.
So when you get a lot of media inquiries, other inflection points. There are companies that like really don't have.
any profile and they're thinking of going public. I would say you have left money on the table
if you find yourself in that position because there's not that much you can do. Like once you meet
with bankers, you're in a quiet period so you can't really be doing anything. Right. So if you are a
company where there's product market fit, the company is growing, things are going well. And you're
thinking of if it's an enterprise software company, another office somewhere, you have a management
team, right? And you're thinking like, you know what, we should, you know, we should get the
CFO in the door because in the next two years, we want to be in a position that if the
market is good, we might file. You definitely need to get a PR firm in yesterday because you only
have a very short window in which you can do anything at all before you go quiet again.
That's actually rather counterintuitive because I would think that you'd want PR when things
aren't going very well, but it sounds like you're saying actually when you have traction,
you want a different kind of PR. That's right. And that's the next inflection point I was going to say,
is it's more incidental than inflection point, but a crisis, I would not leave it to a founder
or a management team to manage a crisis on their own if they don't have deep PR expertise.
You're not allowed to do this alone.
And frankly, even if you did, I was what to say, I've seen these guys in action.
There's a diagnostic thing that only a crisis person can come in and do.
Yeah, you want professional help.
The best example, the trivia one, they desperately needed some PR help way earlier than they
probably actually got it.
Oh, right.
You're referencing the story.
the founder emailed the PR folks and said, don't quote this guy.
Correct.
Have this article.
And that person who was working for them kind of went rogue and did their own thing.
Correct.
And they were all over social media.
And the whole story was just going in a million different directions.
Nobody was in charge over there.
Boy, they sure could have brought in some help.
One other thing, too, I think there are certain people I've worked with who think, oh,
I don't need to tell her about that thing.
It's like some skeleton that I inevitably end up finding out about.
And so I wish I knew up front because I would potentially do things.
things differently. In year one, if I knew that in year two, it was going to come out, you
had a DUI or something. The thing is that, you know, I think lawyers, I've never been in the
situation, knock on wood, but I think lawyers tell you, like, I don't want to know if you did the
thing or whatever. PR people do. I want to know. It's the exact opposite. That's right. I cannot help you
if you're lying to me, and I cannot help, I cannot steer the ship story-wise if I don't know
what to stay away from. No information is privileged for a PR person. That's right. And by the way,
With my DUI example, it's totally hypothetical, but I would not put a founder into a car for a
photo shoot if I knew he had a DUI because I know that picture is going to be amazing for reporters to
use in a year. So I need to know that. But that's, you know, that's a very different muscle, right?
So there is a kind of PR that helps you build, right? And then there's the kind of PR that helps you
protect and, you know, like figure out the most elegant way to be in a crouch. Proactive and reactive
basically, essentially.
Yeah, well, there's reactive stuff where, you know, things are going great and people
want to write about you.
And you want to take advantage of the building phase.
Yeah.
And you react to that.
But, like, all of that is building, right?
You are trying to see stories that don't exist, right?
You're in a crisis.
You're trying to minimize a story that very much exists.
A very certain type of person enjoys managing through a crisis.
And so you want to get an agency that has that type of person or that type of deep experience
in the trenches.
It's war time people.
This goes back to the whole notion of specialties, which you both mentioned earlier.
So are there any other specials?
on the PR. I'm sure there's a million flavors.
Yeah, there are people who are really good at product reviews.
And if you're a hardware company and like product reviews are their own animal, right?
Like, and you want to make them for the most part, that's my belief, you're really high touch.
You know, someone is there to hold the reporter's hands, obviously, and proverbially, you know, as they discover the product.
That's its own muscle.
There's a set of people who will review products.
You know, if you do it right, you know, you even get coverage about like the unpacking.
thing the whole nine bits. Like, that's very different from
execcoms. So, so far I've heard exec comms, product. I've heard
crisis. Are there any other flavors? Developer, like dealing with
developer communities. Consumer. Consumer. I could do
GMA, Today Show, or CBS this morning, which segment do you want? That's a real
specialty. And those are usually people based in New York. Oh,
who have the deep relationships with the producers at these shows. For a consumer
facing product, that's the nirvana is to have a Today Show slot, right? Right.
Still. Still. Still. Even though. Which is hard to believe.
that I just saw this morning. Apparently in 2019, the people will get the majority of their news
online and not on TV. I'm like, it hasn't happened yet. That's surprising. Well, that's where the
reality does come in. I have a friend who founded a beauty related company and she was saying
that getting a placement in-style magazine and also incidentally based in New York was the only
thing that moved product for them. And the thing is like you do the holiday gift guide press tour
in July. And you do the little stand. And you do the little stand.
and it's a giveaways and it's beautiful photo, photography, and it's like all that stuff.
It's like, it has nothing to do with like how you would communicate, how you blog for a developer.
I worked at eBay for seven years. And so every July, we literally had like a Santa in a hundred
degree weather passing out eBay related gifts on literally at Times Square.
That's hilarious.
Because that's when you had to get in the gift guides was in July to make it to December.
But you need someone that knows that. You need someone that really understands how to execute that type of event.
and that you need that kind of lead time.
Yeah, I mean, like, literally, I've come across companies where they call in November
and they want to be in the holiday gift cards.
Oh, that's too late.
And that'll be the following year.
On the magazine side, like that's the things already shipped.
Like, you're already late physically, let alone editorially.
You know, if you're a product company, like, how would you possibly know?
Right, exactly.
Are there other milestones like that?
So as we're on this topic of managing an agency, clearly part of this process, you guys began
with the need to discover the stories internally.
You've talked both about proactive and reactive moment.
incidental and building ones.
Now, what are the other kind of broad milestones
to think about in a company's life cycle
that could be musy moments
that an agency could get involved in?
We exist, right?
And let me just say,
a lot of them, you bundle together, right?
Like, we exist.
And that's interesting,
depending on who the people are
and what they're working on,
all of that.
Then you've raised money.
And of course,
whether that's an inflection point
that the bar for press coverage
keeps raising because, you know,
people raise rather large rounds these days, right?
then you get rockstar independent board member.
All of those are ingredients, right?
Okay, product, right?
And what are the product milestones?
And then you have product market fit
where all of a sudden, 50% of Wall Street
uses your product.
Like, there's lots of milestones.
And I'm not saying every one of them is a big to do,
but they're markers.
And you want to handle them strategically.
I'm so glad you brought this up.
I think a lot of people,
particularly when it's their first time out,
they're lucky.
Just this PR thing happens.
they have a nice product and it's viral and this and the other. And they don't understand
like how lucky they are and they can't separate the two. And then they just think it just
rinse and repeat without doing anything. And that, that, those are flukes, right? Most of the
rest of us, you need to be very deliberate and thoughtful and smart about like what moments
you aggregate together or can go stand alone, who cares about the different things.
What's the vehicle? What do you mean by what's the vehicle? Sometimes you want to put a
tweet out. Sometimes you actually want to just give it to a reporter exclusively. Sometimes you want
to write a press release. Do people still do those? It kind of depends on what you're trying to
achieve. So what are other milestones? I mean, you mentioned earlier the gift guide. Were there any
other consumer type ones like that? There's a company I'm talking to you right now who's based in
L.A. and they want to go national. So if you're really taking your story out of a small area and
making it national, that's an excellent place for an agency because, you know, if you are launching,
you know, if you're one of those, like,
companies in the transportation bucket, right?
Like, you're not going to put people everywhere,
but you are going to launch in different markets, right?
Right, for sure.
Kind of getting local people, players on the ground.
So let's shift gear here and just go deep for a couple of minutes
on some terminology.
I love doing this on the podcast.
We do taxonomies and terminology.
And people mostly don't like to admit that they don't know a lot of these PR terms.
They think PR is fluffy and, oh, I should know it.
But actually, when you dig into it,
you realize most people don't know most of the phrases.
Even I didn't.
I was on the flip side of receiving PR pitches.
And when I first came here, someone mentioned GA.
And I was like, what the fuck is GA?
And it's generally available for the product being available.
Let's do a little buzzword bingo.
So AOR.
Agency of Record.
And what does it mean?
Why does it matter?
It means that you have a master agreement with an agency who's going to service your
business for a certain amount of money every single month.
So it's like a retainer.
It's a retainer.
It's a contract.
So let me ask you a question.
Because you've been on the corporate side so much, like you have an agency of record,
but you have multiple agencies.
Okay.
So agency of record would be...
Is that the bragging right?
It's the biggest.
It's probably the biggest piece of your budget.
It's the deepest relationship.
And say it's an agency who covers everything except crisis and then you have a crisis.
You would go outside of your AOR to supplement their skill set.
With another agency.
With a different agency.
RFP.
Request for proposal.
Should we do this at the same time?
Oh, my God.
So that's sort of oftentimes companies use this process where they put out an RFP to multiple agencies
so they have some sort of standard set of.
of questions and answers, right? And oftentimes the bigger the company gets, the more involved
they can get. And they're often driven by procurement and not the actual PR team, although they're
obviously orchestrated by that. And it's sort of who is, who are you as a business, right?
Like what are your revenues, team size locations, all that kind of stuff, right? And then
how would you handle X or give us your ideas for why? And then the agency comes in and oftentimes
you send in the questionnaire and then there's sort of this bake-off.
where you do the proposal and you bring the team.
It's a dog and pony show.
It's a dog and pony show.
You come up with really good ideas based on nothing.
And then you have to sell.
I'm not sure I would recommend them.
I don't think they're the most effective thing because it comes down to oftentimes
where like that agency has really good ideas.
The big thing I would add on RFP too is do not bring in the shiny object from D.C.
Or the shiny object from New York, if that is not your account team.
Bring the people who are going to work on the account.
That is one thing in agency.
do is like, oh, John is here for DC. He was Clinton's social media policy person and then
you never see John ever again. He's there to win the pitch. I always, when I would do RFPs back in
the day, I would always tell people, I only want to see the team that I'm going to be working with
every day. It's really important. That's super important. And that's why, you know, if you actually
do the process that way and you make that requirement, that team is ready to go. You've literally
onboarded them actually. They're in it. Yes. So I'd love to get your perspective on this. If you put your
account up for review because you're not happy with your agency, the incumbent agency should not
be allowed to pitch. I think it's terrible for the agency and I think it's terrible for the
company. I'm going to say something harsh. If the agency actually wants to repitch the business,
you should fire them again. Why? Because it's just a stupid-ass decision. Replace the revenue,
learn from why is the account gone, and then move the hell on. I could not agree more.
You set up all these bad dynamics by doing it. Well, I do have a question, though, which is,
is how do you avoid the complacency problem when you do have an ongoing agency of record
and you want to light a fire under them?
So I think Alcass was really good at this because we had clients like, so Salesforce.com, for
example, we had, I think, about a dozen years from 1998 onwards, right?
Through, think, five VPs of marketing before the company filed for IPO.
And that was like Karen Maruni.
She did an amazing, amazing job managing that account through changes and flexion points, growth.
and what we would do is we would ask ourselves and we'd ask the teams like, okay, so what's on
the to-do list and what's not on the to-do list? And like, forget what the client is telling
you during the weekly call. It's like, what do you think will blow them away? And then go do that.
And like, do not ignore media because if there's a good story, you have permission to do everything
else. You can have every conversation. You can screw up occasionally. But if there's no media,
then like, what are you doing? And as a result,
we always were called a media shop. And I was like, you know what? I'll wear that badge with
pride because I think it's important. What does it mean to be a media shop? I actually don't know
what that means. The only thing that you can do is talk to reporters. Or the thing you do best is
media relations. You can't, like, you're not really good at crisis. You're not really good at
building out, like messaging. But like that's the thing. It's like you get so mired into like
this is what's on the to-do list. And mind you, if you're working with a company, your client
may be sophisticated and they may not be. So you need to do that. Like, you need to have your own
motor and machine to go like, okay, what should it look like? And then go do that. Yeah.
And on my end, I would say at eBay, the best relationship I ever had with an agency was
with Kaplo Communications, who was based in New York. And the reason that we were able to avoid
complacency with them is we were basically categorized into different product categories. Basically,
they had clothing, choose, and accessories, but it was like, if you nail this, you can get another
category. So we kept upping the pie. And they weren't a fit for every single category, right? But
it was always a possibility. And so that kept them from being complacent. Besides the domains
you guys have described, like consumer enterprise, some of these pieces of the pie or specialties
like crisis, local, what are your thoughts on the other competencies within a shop? Like, should you
go for a one-size-fits-all agency that offers interactive and writing and other
things, should you go for a boutique firm that only focuses on X? Like, do you have thoughts on the
size and the types of the agencies themselves? I don't mean to sound like a broken record,
but it depends what you're trying to solve for. Well, that's a fair point. There is sort of very
broadly, right? If the company is doing well, basically across the board and it's global,
it's kind of nice to have an AOR that is global, because you can just turn knobs, you can turn
things on and off, and then you can add and layer in other stuff that you need. You mean like the global
agreement.
Like, yes, a global agreement because, you know, if, you know, if you're that established,
it's nice to go like, okay, I need the Indian people to do X, right?
I need the team in South Africa to lay low for a while.
It's just, that's easier.
Like, otherwise, you have, like, you have to figure out, like, who's my international
agency there and who managed it?
I do think a lot of agencies promise that they're amazing at that.
Oh, don't worry.
My Greece counterpart will easily talk to the Brazil counterpart.
It doesn't happen as seamlessly as it look.
So you really have to dig before you hire them on for a global job to make sure that these processes are really down.
And you will often give up the hire a bar for the global.
For the coverage.
Because I don't think, it's true.
Nobody can tell me that there is an, I have not seen an agency that is equally excellent in every office that they have.
I just don't.
Let's spend a few minutes now just talking about some mechanics of engaging with an agency.
We've already talked about the process of why it matters,
the terms, how to, you know, the configurations, give me some more of the nitty-gritty of bringing them
into your machinery. So you guys mentioned like you want to have regular check-ins. Should they be weekly? Should
they be daily? Should there be someone in your office embedded? Should there be someone just on a phone call?
How do you manage all that? So weekly usually has worked for me in the past. I think embedding them,
those are the people who have done the best with the company. They can walk around. They've got great
relationships. They get a vibe for the culture. They can go to an all-hands media.
and hear the story from the CEO. There was a model, again, with Kaplow, where they had somebody
that went on leave for six weeks, and I went to New York and worked out of their office for six
weeks. And that was amazing for me, too. But you inverted it, literally. Yeah, I inverted
it. And I got a better view of how the agency ran and what they needed more from my team
and how challenging the time zone thing was. And it was really valuable. There's nothing that
sort of is like picking up the phone going like, hey, it doesn't have to be, I'm reporting back
to you on what I promised. It could be, I just.
had coffee with a reporter and they're really interested in X. Or, you know, your competition seems
to be all over. Right. Like, you know, so just sharing intel back and forth because you need
what you, you need to communicate enough so that you're in a groove. It's a little bit like
talking to your kids. Like, you need to be talking. Basically, you need to be in some communication
all the time so that there's a groove because you want to be top of mind for the agency so that
pay attention to you. And for the agency, you want to be talking.
of mind so they include you and stuff. One thing we did at LinkedIn, too, is quarterly we would
sit down with the agency and we basically had like a red, yellow, green on the things that we'd agreed
they would do and talk about what was working, what wasn't. And that was an opportunity, not
for us to just say, hey, this isn't working. They were able to tell us we could make this work
if we had more of X, Y, and Z. To use that them up for success. Exactly. And it felt like you could
have a transparent conversation without hurting the other person's feelings. So I will add one more
thing. I actually think that it is important for the CEO to know at least some people at the
agency and for them occasionally to staff a meeting. And a lot of people probably disagree with me
on that. I totally agree with you. Because one is eventually there's a bill, right? And like if they
don't ever see you, right, it's like, out of sight out of mind. What am I paying for? What is this?
And also, there's a reason that person is the CEO and the founder of the company.
They are the originator of the idea.
They are hopefully the most compelling person to talk about what it is and where it is going.
And again, if you want to enable a bunch of storytelling, then you ought to have the people have access to the holder of the story.
And the in-house PR person needs to give up a little of the control to allow the agency in sometimes.
This is actually one of the questions I wanted to ask, which is a founder,
CEO should be pretty not too involved and not uninvolved.
The thing with, you know, if you're the founder of a company, you're trusting those people
to represent your soul to the outside world, which then gets written up in some way by
a neutral third party, hopefully neutral.
I think that those are people you want to know.
Absolutely.
Don't you think?
Yeah, I do too.
And I think a lot of CEOs don't have the patience because they, again, have this mindset.
I just want to outsource it.
doesn't the whole point of me paying for all this, I don't have to deal with it, you're taking
care of it, et cetera, but you're saying that they are, it's like sales. You had to put the CEO
in front of the account. Yeah. I mean, look, if you don't want to deal with PR, then don't bother
hiring an agency. A normal reporter, completely reasonable reporter, will expect to see and meet
and talk to the CEO. So more on the mechanic side. Tell me, we were talking about the RFPs or
the proposals and getting all these in. Whether you do it or not, you clearly may have multiple
people you're considering as potential agencies. How do you vet them and know that they're the right
one for you? I think the best agency referrals come from reporters. So they'll come in and they'll
pitch and you'll say, wow, that team was amazing, great ideas. But to get to the real heart of
who they are as media relations experts, as you call reporters you have relationships with and say,
what do you think of so-and-so at such-and-such agency? I love you for saying that because I will tell you
so many people, when I say, are you referencing them with reporters?
And you're like, oh, good idea.
Duh.
That's their customer.
So referencing them for sure and then other clients.
Either clients that have churned out, you get a lot of feedback that way or current clients
too who are probably relatively happy.
What if the problem is on your side as a company?
Like what if the turnover is on your side and you're the reason the agency is not doing well?
Like how do you sort of tease apart like the truth and the reality of that?
Does it even matter?
It's excellent because many companies don't even ask themselves that question.
So they'll call and they'll go, like, we're unhappy with our PR firm.
And then you start digging and it's like, why?
What's going on?
Well, they're just not executing.
Like what's going, like, and you just try to diagnose like, okay, so do they know
what to do?
Are you giving them information?
Are they part of, you know, and something, I always say, was like, you know, if you're
a good client, they have a chance.
If you're not a good client, then they don't even have a chance.
That's why I like that report card thing because you can easily say, look, you're not
executing on this and they can say, well, you're not.
you didn't give me access or you didn't return my call. Exactly. You use that review to basically
talk about what you as a company could be doing better. And you're absolutely right. It's usually two-sided.
It's very infrequently just the agency. It's just much easier to blame the agency. Also,
my favorite is like new CMO comes in. First thing they do is do an agency review. Happens all
the time. But like, I think it's just so much smarter to take some time and go like, okay, what's
actually going on here. So that's about diagnosing the success of it. How do you know it's successful
It's working, that your partnership.
This is not the measurement question because I know we've talked about it a lot and there's not a clear-cut answer.
How about selling people internally?
What if you, the person who's managing the agency knows it's working, but your CFO who holds like the purse controller doesn't agree?
Or how do you make that case internally?
Well, you obviously try to explain and educate like what it is and what they're supposed to do.
And then at the end of the day it comes down to do you have a mandate?
I think it's good to include everybody in the process and,
in the updates, give, have them see and engage with the agency and do all of those things, right?
But at the end of the day, to me, it is a little binary.
You either have a mandate to figure out how to make your function successful within a
certain budget parameter or you don't.
And it's making sure, too, you can't be assured that a CFO saw the big story in
the Chronicle this morning.
You actually do need to do some promotion of the work that the agency and the team do to
PR back internally, basically.
Exactly.
You can't just expect everyone's going to fall into your story.
Right.
or absolutely saw it. So you actually have to do a little promotion internally. So we talked about
some major inflection points in the company. What about going public? So you talked about
market earlier about the importance of having PR milestones in place before you go public. So,
Shannon, you've taken a couple of companies public. What's some special advice you have for those
thinking about that particular piece? So a financial comms agency is super, super helpful in the lead
up to your first earnings call. So there's the actual IPO piece, which I think a lot of people think
is much tricker than it really is. The day of is a very busy, crazy day, but it's not rocket science
necessarily. I think getting an agency to help write a script and get the CEO and CFO to really be on
the same page about the story and practice it. It's a nerve-wracking day. No, your first earnings call
post-IPO. Right. So I think the IPO has this misnomer that it's like super challenging and tricky
and yeah, there's some complexity to it. But what's really hard is your first earnings call as a
public company. And so that's where I would optimize for getting an agency and to really help
figure out, are these two on the same page? What is our story? Where are we and where are the gaps?
And does that person report into an investor relations function? What if that doesn't exist yet?
It depends. I've seen investor relations report into the CFO and the comms person reports sometimes
to the CEO or CMO. And, Margaret, of all the startups you've seen, what would you say is the best
reporting structure for where an agency and a comms person should kind of report into.
Is there any variations on that? So I am a proponent of having the PR person report to the CEO.
It can report into the CMO, but it just oftentimes, so if the CMO is a quant person, I think
definitely PR should not report into the CMO because it's just a different animal. If the CMO is a
brand story type of person, it can certainly work.
of the who does your review, the PR person needs to have access to the CEO whenever they need
to. And then that layer in between, whoever it is, cannot be upset when the PR person goes
direct to the CEO and doesn't necessarily loop into them. So they have to have, everyone's got
to be okay with the fact that I may not report to the CEO, but I have direct access and I don't
need to bring you in every single time I talk to him or her. Sounds that the CEO is the one responsible
for setting that precedent and culture, that all these pieces are okay. It's telling,
Right? When a CEO refuses to do that, the caliber of talent they can get just drops 10 notches.
And it shows, too, that they may not value the function as much as we would like them to.
Okay. You guys have given us a lot of food for thought in terms of how to concretely manage an agency, think about it strategically.
What are the things that you wish you could tell founders and, like, hit them over the head with every day that you're like, I want these guys to know this.
I think founders have an idea that you call a reporter and go, hey, can you write this story?
it does not work that way.
And I wish people were a little more thoughtful about the function, the comms function,
and actually how strategic it needs to be and how well thought out it needs to be
before you take a story to an important reporter.
It's not easy.
I was going to argue almost a flip of that, which is,
it seems like there's a new breed of founders who sort of are in this internet native world
of blogging is everything.
Go direct.
You don't need any middleman.
Illuminate all the middlemen.
And you can do that, but you will never be as credible as an independent source of information.
And you may also not have the eyeballs that you can get when Wired writes a story and then it gets shared on social channels.
Worse, let's say you're established, you've done fine on your own, things are great.
Well, what if something goes sideways?
You have no relationships.
You have no trust.
you have no benefit of the doubt.
All you have is people, like, hear all of your claims and adoration, and all of a sudden
you have to do a product recall.
Wouldn't you like to have some relationships in place where at least you can explain
yourself?
Yeah.
I think so.
The credibility points in a bank, too.
That's great.
Any other final common misconceptions parting?
I would just say, you know, as much care as you take with your product and the hiring of your
first 10 engineers and like whose money you take, right? Take as much care to decide like you're
either going to take this function seriously and then actually do it and learn it because of people
who are there to help you or actually don't bother because spending $2 with a half-hearted
commitment is a complete waste. And don't be afraid to admit when you don't know something related
to PR. Hopefully that's the point of this podcast. Thank you Shannon and Margaret for joining the
A6 and Z podcast.