Creative pitching has been a staple in agencies’ everyday hustle. It’s a cycle that gives us that adrenaline – the high of venturing into a new project, the excitement of brainstorming and thinking of the unexplored. But at the end of this process, the mixed feelings of frustration, doubt, and exhaustion rushes in our caffeinated bloodstream. You see, we invest time, brain cells, emotions, and food into each pitch in hopes of nailing the brand’s preference. If we’re lucky, clients give us at least a week to prepare, but in reality, we need to shorten the process to three days. That’s three days (and nights) to churn the brief into a fully realized design and event experience.
The issue of whether or not clients should pay agencies to pitch for marketing services seems to be unspoken especially in the Philippines. Recently, freelance designers have rallied their co-artists to say no to free designing. This social media uproar has sparked conversations and more importantly, empowered the artists to price their work. With this step forward, we as creative agencies should put the spotlight on the issue of creative pitching, which is really sugarcoating for free unpaid creative work to win over a project. If we look at the process under a microscope, free pitching is giving away ideas to a prospective client. We are handing them our most valuable asset on a golden plate.
For a better understanding of why free pitching can be exploitative in nature for creatives, we can compare the marketing industry to other industries. Take for example tech repair. We pay the tech repair guys just to know the diagnostics of a broken laptop. In pitching, we analyze the problem and offer solutions. Offering solutions without requiring the client to pay for the service trivializes our work.
Related sources have also pointed out that free creative pitching is wrong not only for the participating agencies but also for the clients conducting the pitch. Sure, agencies were given the best briefing client could have put together, but you cannot expect to get the optimum answer to your requirements in just a single meeting with five other agencies. Clients expect these agencies to deconstruct the briefing and lay down the formula. But because there was no in-depth discussion between the agency and the client, agencies try to figure everything out from the surface level. In return, the presentations are more often than not a trial-and-error.