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Why creativity is a future proof superpower and how to master it with agile thinking

Sam Reid

by Sam Reid in

Process & Methods

10 min read

At Loops, we believe creativity will become a future proof superpower for the brands who actively prioritise it, because genuine creativity is what cuts through noisy markets and gets noticed. In 2019, an individual in the US was estimated to be exposed to between 4,000 and 10,000 ads daily. That number has gone up and continues to escalate.

Excellence in brand and marketing has always been a powerful moat, but if you consider that it has never been easier to bring new products to market (e.g. the explosion of startups) and it's never been easier to pinpoint your audience (e.g. social ads), these moats evaporate quickly.

In other words, more brands are competing for a finite share of voice and spending more money to be seen. The competing fight for attention makes it increasingly difficult to communicate the unique value of your offer with a message that resonates and gets heard.

Being heard doesn't require shouting louder - it requires listening harder. It requires empathising with values, needs, and goals and reacting in near real time to craft ideas that are brave, relevant and fresh. This ability to adapt in hours, not weeks, will be a major competitive advantage for the brands and marketing teams who master it.

And there's another hurdle to be addressed too, which nobody ever seems to discuss, yet is a massive frustration for anyone working in the creative industries. Coming up with brilliant, brave ideas is one thing, but getting stakeholder buy-in? That's another challenge altogether.

This is nearly always due to a lack of data on how effective the thinking actually is. And when there's no data, you're soon drawn into subjective debate.

These debates are frustrating, mentally draining, and the cause of many late nights reworking ideas based on the highest paid person's opinion. What should be an inspiring and fun role in creative comms quickly becomes laden with anxiety and pressure.

To solve these issues, the agile creative process is the way forward because it gives you the data to be objective and make informed decisions fast. It makes good ideas better and proves that the end product is exactly what the audience wants.

Infographic of the agile creative development for consumer centric studies

Adopted from software development practises and adapted for brand, design and marketing, developing creative projects with agile methodology means less time spent perfecting ideas in a bubble, and more time understanding the problems at hand and iterating solutions with the audience's input. It's a way to create, measure, learn, and develop with a red thread of insight and logic that shows rigour and proves impact. And it's really simple to apply too.

Inspired by "Designing Thinking" infographic

Agile marketing is a strategic approach that enhances flexibility and data-driven decision-making in creative projects. It leverages agile marketing implementation, focusing on specific features and principles that characterize the effective incorporation of Agile methodologies within a marketing department.

This approach is guided by the agile marketing manifesto, a pivotal document that underscores the significance of delivering value quickly, fostering transparency, and encouraging collaboration among marketing teams.

Adopting agile methodologies and practices offers numerous benefits, including improved speed, productivity, and flexibility in marketing operations. These methodologies, which encompass a variety of frameworks such as Scrum and Kanban, challenge traditional marketing strategies by emphasizing the importance of continuous feedback and iterative work processes.

However, the transition to agile practices also presents challenges, particularly in aligning team members with agile principles that underpin this transformative approach.

The application of agile principles and these key principles in marketing and creative teams is instrumental in boosting innovation, supporting changing priorities, and better aligning deliverables with business objectives. This alignment is crucial for speeding products to market and enhancing overall team performance.

A core outcome of adopting an agile approach is continuous improvement, which drives teams to refine their processes iteratively, thereby promoting efficiency and productivity. Another significant outcome is heightened customer satisfaction, achieved by prioritizing the customer's needs and involving them at every step of the development process.

This collaborative approach ensures that changes can be made based on customer feedback, leading to better collaboration and superior results.

Furthermore, aligning with key performance indicators (KPIs) is essential for measuring the impact of agile creative teams on business objectives. By tracking and adhering to KPIs, teams can make informed decisions that significantly influence business impact and team performance.

How agile marketing teams sell bold creative ideas - without endless debate

Audience data - Every marketing team and creative agency regularly has heard it before - "I don't think our consumers will like that," or "I just don't think that'll work in blue." Testing creative ideas, even on a small scale, before bringing them to the table will help you get buy-in on the work. The data collected not only bolsters creative output, but also validates it, shutting down the subjective opinions like those above. Assuming your organisation or client believes in the voice of the consumer, speaking to them during the creative process can alleviate the typical opinions that slow everything down.

A clear, recorded process - Having everyone on the same page throughout creative projects is essential for avoiding last minute curve balls. Clarity on what's been agreed at each stage, backed up with the insight that informs the evolution of decision making gives you a single source of truth that can be referred to. So when that stakeholder or client who's been absent until just before you're about to go live throws in their two cents, you can politely head them off at the pass with the red thread of logic.

A willingness to iterate toward the end goal - A caveat to agile thinking that some are initially put off by is that, while you can plan upfront as much as you want, you have to be content with not knowing the exact outcome. But that's ok, because the point is to iterate until you reach success. You show rough work early and you learn all the way through to create something polished and robust. This doesn't happen in the traditional creative processes, usually because people are fearful of having ideas killed off early. "Will this stop us coming up with the next Cadbury's Gorilla?" is something we hear a lot. The answer is no, it won't - it's quite the opposite. Agile creativity allows you to go off-piste and explore ambitious ideas with impunity. If you're wrong, you know why. If there's a glimmer of heat, you double down in that direction.

When you show an evolution of an idea, underpinned by real audience insight that proves impact, you'll be far more likely to make fast progress.

The agile creative process in three simple steps (key agile principles)

3 steps of agile creative infographic by Loops

Step 1 - Explore the audience needs

As Einstein once said, "If I had an hour to solve a problem, I'd spend 55 minutes thinking about the problem and 5 minutes thinking about solutions.”

It's easy to be faced with a problem, give it a glance, and head straight to finding an answer, rather than exploring the problem at hand more deeply. Agile creative believes that the more you focus on the problem, the better you understand the problem, and therefore the more effective your solution will be. Most of us are nothing like the audience we're selling to, but we assume we can elicit emotions and actions they'll care about. If you're a few degrees out at the start, where you end up may be well off course.

Instead, we should be properly understanding the audience by asking them careful questions and drawing insights from their answers. What really makes them tick? What are they actually trying to achieve? How can we deliver something truly meaningful to them?

We recommend using tried and trusted templates like personas, empathy maps, brand manifestos and moodboards, putting them in front of the audience, then asking questions to learn whether the assumptions being made are correct. You'll learn a huge amount at this first phase and it sets the correct direction for everything else.

Layout of  processes regarding agile thinking

Step 2 - Elevate ideas with audience feedback

The world changes faster every day, therefore showcasing ideas only when they are perfected is not a sound strategy. Better to show early and often so you can learn and adapt.

Reid Hoffman, the cofounder of PayPal and LinkedIn, sums this up perfectly: “If you aren't embarrassed by the first version of your product, you shipped too late.”

Get your idea in front of your audience (a proper audience, not five people from around the office) and gather their input - what do they like/not like? What do they think is missing? Is there anything that isn't clear? This input will feed the iterative process and highlight any blindspots you missed. You'll heat-seek to value instead of going back to the drawing board later.

Layout of agile thinking filled out with storyboards

User stories, storyboards, adcepts, customer journey maps, wireframes etc. are great lo-fi tools to get in front of real people so you can elevate the thinking in collaboration with them. The trick is to create a sense of reality with a clear structure that people can respond to.

If people don't like specific areas of a journey or message, it'll soon become clear. If you see lots of similar suggestions for improving a concept, bake these in. In this phase, you systematically remove risk and increase impact by surfacing required changes.

Creative teams especially - don't be afraid to show your ideas early, even if they're not complete or not "perfect". Like Voltaire said, "Perfect is the enemy of good."

Step 3 -Execute with confidence and clarity

In a traditional process, it's typically at the end when creative ideas get tested. This can backload the risk and give little room for manoeuvring. However, if you've taken the agile approach, you'll have a deep understanding of the problem you face, and a creative solution shaped by the input of your audience.

Now, when you ask the question “Will it inspire action?”, the responses will more likely be “yes”.

infographic of working and agile thinking with pie charts

In the 'execute' step, the output you test should be more or less ready for release. The objective is to sense check if the final work does the job, or if it elements need further finessing. The hard work of delivering something meaningful should have been done by now, so it's more a case of double checking that the execution will push the right buttons to inspire the action you seek.

Side note - If you are producing social or display ads, and you're confident the creative strategy is working, you can jump straight to the execute stage and finesses content pre-flight e.g. understand how to refine critical elements like copy before you invest in media and it's too late.

The result - Impact

Impact isn’t a step in this process - it’s the outcome of the process i.e. robust output, delivered fast, continuous improvement.

Applying the agile process removes the subjectivity that often plagues progress. Consider being shown work from a team who have nothing to prove their idea’s value other than their word. Now consider the same team showing you three iterations of the same idea with audience data that informs each evolution. Which situation would you be more confident signing off on?

Changing how you work might sound like a lot of work - adopting a new mindset, version after version, analyzing, etc. - but it’s not. In fact, it involves far less work in the long run.

Loops graph about what audiences think and realignment

Integrating an agile team structure brings numerous benefits, including increased speed, productivity, and a strong focus on experimentation. This approach encourages a mindset geared towards continuous improvement and flexibility, allowing for rapid adjustments based on real-time feedback and market demands.

Scaling up marketing operations effectively requires the formation of agile teams. These teams enhance marketing activities by structuring projects around frequent output and continuous improvement. Agile practices foster an environment of transparency and collaboration, ensuring that each team member is aligned with the project's goals and progress.

The benefits of faster turnaround times, creative autonomy, brave ideas making it, reduced risk, and finishing on time, will all ladder up to team harmony and a happier work life. What’s not to like?

data led infographic with 5 points

Interested in learning more about the agile methodology? Send us a note via the chat.

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