Indie agency Left Off Madison takes a right turn into live shopping

Independent media agency Left Off Madison (LOM), formed by ex-Dentsu and Merkle executives who desired to break free from the holding-company system, is expanding into the production space. Specifically, they believe live shopping may be about to have its moment.

Rob Douglas and Boris Litvinov, who founded LOM a year ago, are creating the offering under a division called Right Off Vine, using a small production facility owned by Douglas’ family as the production base. The positioning is simple, said Douglas: a single source for all advertising production needs across the media spectrum (TV, digital, CTV, radio, OOH) for any client.

“The keywords here are ‘single source,’ and ‘advertising’,” said Douglas. “We’re not a company that does music videos, or documentaries or all this other stuff. We just do advertising, and we’re going to cover the gamut of all the core critical advertising components.”

Douglas noted that the aim is geared toward being operational and cost efficient, as well as embodying consistency and continuity across a client’s ad tactics. “It’s more than just that we’re using the right colors and the right fonts,” he added. “There’s a small team of people that are making sure that… all of it looks like it’s borne from the same brand.”

That said, a speciality will be in live shopping, added Litvinov, and the media agency is already working with a client it declined to name on a live shopping experience. He said the approach is a website-based experience he described as “QVC on crack,” and a social-driven experience (think TikTok, perhaps).

“They each have their pros and cons,” said Litvinov. “This first one we’ve proposed to the client is a live shopping on their website because they are a pretty new online e-commerce business.” Litvinov said the goals for the client hit three levels: increase sales, decrease returns and generate content.

According to a senior marketing manager at that current LOM client, who also declined to speak for attribution, the shopping experiment is a small new line item that the client plans to test across multiple product groups. If it succeeds, the plan is to expand spend on it in 2025. 

“Few are doing it well because the content isn’t engaging, and the quality of the products offered just isn’t there,” said the manager. “We think there’s a better way forward and are interested in exploring what’s possible. These are the guys to do it. We’ve been impressed with their ability to understand our target audiences, and in some cases, unlock new consumer groups that we hadn’t previously targeted.”

Independent media analyst Brian Wieser, who publishes the Madison and Wall newsletter, a week ago revised his expectations for modest growth among independents for Q1 2024 up to 2% from 0.7% he had predicted in Q4 ’23.

https://digiday.com/?p=541061

More in Media Buying

Why Washington State is investing in a new kind of voter education campaign

The $1.8 million campaign, paid for by the Washington Secretary of State’s office, goes beyond boosting voter turnout to explain the mail-in voting and how the process is safe, secure and transparent.

Gale immerses clients into social beyond just media buys — will it pay off?

Historically known for CRM specialization, data-crunching and use of channels others have forgotten about (email, for example) to find business opportunities for its clients, Gale’s immersive social culture unit leverages all social elements in rapid turnaround fashion to launch clients’ new brands or expand them into new markets.

Amid a new CEO-hunt, is Criteo up for sale?

Armchair analysts speculate on the next move of one of the biggest names on ad tech’s chessboard.