Monday, 30 March 2009

Daddy, what's a planner? Part II

A while ago I wrote about my inability to describe what a planner is to my mum and concluded with this great little ditty on being an Explorer by Keri Smith:


In truth this sidestepped the question of what a planner was and instead gave a really nice description of what they should do but it seemed a far better approach. Nearly a year on and I came across this post from Leon Phang of Swedish agency of Jung von Matt. He’s managed to round up an assured collection of top-table planners from Russell Davies to Faris Yakob and asked them all one simple question (sounds dangerous already):

“What’s your best advice for the next-generation of young and ambitious planners?”

Predictably, answers were broad ranging with a whole host of words of wisdom from “solving the problem is more valuable than last week’s copy headline” (Spicer) to “planning is all about getting people to do stuff” (Davies). However, what was really interesting was that so many of the wisdom inspired words seemed to preach the same basic principles of being an ‘Explorer’. Be observant, build rapport, be instinctive, be intuitive, be interesting/interested, read!

When I was thinking about writing this post I was trying to think of a typically over-opinionated response to all of this advice from the so-called top dogs. What would my answer be? What would I pass on to the young in my future days of planning guru-ship? What have they missed? There must be something insightful I can throw into the mix?

But, I think I’ll stick with the Explorer for this one. Not just because it sounds quite cool and because it’s written in quite a twee way, but because it really hits the nail on the head for me.

Or maybe I’m inadvertently taking Yakob’s advice after all – “Steal everything – every trick and idea – and make them your own”.

No, it’s my blog and I’m sticking with the Explorer.


PS Interestingly Leon Phang actually links his job description to the Wikipedia entry for Account Planner. Wish I’d found this a year ago, would've been a lot easier.