I tell you what. You hear complaints about the mainstream media being out of touch at times. But thankfully the Wall Street Journal is able to restore my faith in their relevance by coming up with scoops such as this:
More Digital Ads Are Produced Offshore
Marketers Ship Work To Costa Rica, Bulgaria; AvVenta Reaps Rewards
Really? People are offshoring their creative? I had no idea. I mean, when I used elance.com last month to have 35 ad banners made for $400, and 25 different firms bid on my project, I just thought I was unique. It never dawned on me that there was an actual industry around connecting American companies to leverage affordable and talented creative folks from abroad. Thanks to the WSJ, my eyes have been opened to this 5-10 year old phenomenon.
Among the many sad parts of this article, is the fact that the story was obviously planted by a firm called avVenta Worldwide. So not only does this WSJ writer, Emily Steel, make it appear that she just found out about creative outsourcing, she also makes it appear that she thinks that avVenta Worldwide is somehow revolutionary in the space. The article basically tells this story. "Agencies needed a way to cut costs and bill their Fortune 500 clients the same amount. So they hire avVenta Worldwide, who has a team of creatives in Costa Rica, Bulgaria and the Ukraine. The agency margins grow, avVenta Worldwide margins grow and no one knows the difference."
Well, no one knows the difference until your PR team gets an article placed in the WSJ and all of those Fortune 500 clients who thought they were paying for Madison Avenue heavyweights with Masters in Graphic Design say, "Uh, WTF?"