In this small book, you can learn the lingo, who’s who in the mess of mystery advertising agency titles, and how to panic appropriately during deadlines. Like all Bluff books it’s very funny, and sometimes so true it’s scary.
Art Directors.
Art directors are in theory responsible for the visual aspect of an advertisement. In practice, art directors will direct practically anything, the campaign, the account, the commercial, the agency, the client, and the personal lives of anyone they find attractive. What they think they do;
What they actually do;
Copywriters
Copywriters have the hardest job of all because everyone, from the Art Director to the Client, Knows that they can write as good copy as the copywriter, but of course they have much more important things to do with their time. What they think they do;
What they actually do;
Account Executives.
Account executives were once known as contact people because they were in day to day contact with the client and are now known more affectionately, or derisively, as suits. Sometimes even as empty suits. It is their sad lot in life to explain agency thinking to the client and client thinking to the agency. Not surprisingly, many develop split personalities (both of which will be paranoid).
What they think they do;
What they actually do;
* note, since we moved to a new system old books are now re-posted here, in case you felt like you had a deja-vu. This was originally posted back in 1996.