Happy New Year, Folks!
Yes, it’s rates again! If you’ve read my previous articles on ratings and audits, you’ll agree that these are serious issues that cannot be ignored. Unfortunately, we are turning a blind eye due to pressures that continue to mount within the industry. My biggest fear? The media ecosystem is in distress, teetering on the edge of collapse.
Let me explain why.
My earlier piece on audits ruffled many feathers, attracting both brickbats and criticism. However, today’s burning issue is rates. Running a media business is no small feat—it requires relentless effort to ensure that content reaches the last-mile consumer. As broadcasters, publishers, and radio professionals, we constantly prove our worth to advertisers by delivering superior content, cutting-edge technology, and innovative solutions. Yet, little do clients realize that this all comes at a significant cost—one that has become nearly impossible to recover in today’s market. The result? Many in our industry are being forced to shut shop.
The Media Pitch Dilemma
What’s the real issue here? Every time a client moves their media account from Agency A to Agency B, broadcasters, publishers, and radio professionals are pressured to accept lower rates—often dictated through the agency. These rate cuts happen arbitrarily, without any justifiable reason.
Media inflation exists only on Excel sheets, while clients continue to enjoy increasing profits, hiking the prices of their products with seemingly logical explanations—convincing only to themselves. Meanwhile, we are caught in an endless cycle of negotiations where pitches have become nothing more than an exercise in rate-cutting rather than strategic partnerships.
Even worse, many clients now rely solely on CPRP (Cost per Rating Point) as the primary metric, leading to poor-quality audiences, diminished sales impact, and an overall erosion of strategic media planning. Some clients even invite agencies based purely on their ability to offer the lowest rates, treating media pricing like a menu card selection. In this circus, if one agency refuses, another is always willing to comply—and business shifts hands without any real thought for long-term value.
Do Media Agencies Have Any Freedom?
The hard truth? No, they don’t.
It is alarming to even discuss the commissions that some clients pay their agencies. Somewhere, this madness needs to stop. If we continue down this path, will the next step be advertisers demanding that we pay them to run their ads?
Media agencies should be given more autonomy—after all, they are the experts. Yet, no one seems to ask what motivates us—broadcasters, publishers, radio professionals, and media agencies—to continue delivering value in an environment where we are constantly squeezed. If this trend persists, there will be little incentive for agencies to provide creative, strategic, and consumer-centric solutions.
Shouldn’t agencies be evaluated on their ability to drive strategy, innovation, and consumer engagement, rather than just on how low they can push media rates?
A Question of Survival
If this relentless rate-chasing continues, the media ecosystem will face obliteration. The focus on content quality will diminish, and brands may find themselves struggling with consumer engagement and sales.
We—broadcasters, publishers, radio professionals, and media agencies—have reached a critical juncture. The industry is in dire need of a visionary approach, one that recognizes the value we bring beyond just price negotiations.
There are better ways to engage with media professionals and agencies, yet we continue to be strong-armed into unsustainable practices. While I have no illusions that this article will trigger immediate change, as a media practitioner, I believe it is crucial to present the other side of the story.
This is not frustration speaking—rather, it is a stark warning about the future. The question is—will anyone listen?