The smallest agency in the world. It’s quite the opening
gambit, and when Pius Walker decided to open his own creative shop in Zurich in
2006, it felt like the perfect positioning. It marked him out from the crowd,
in an age where start-ups overstate their size and where growing indies have
one eye on world domination. After all, world domination can be a bit
distracting when what you really should be focusing on is good creative ideas.
Pius’ wife, however, wasn’t so convinced.
“We had a big discussion, my wife and I. My wife thought it
was a bad idea: ‘why do you want to limit yourself like that?’” chuckles Pius,
who sees things slightly differently. “It limits us in a positive way. It gave
us a proposition right from the start. We don’t care about being big and huge,
the idea is what matters. It was a plan. I still don’t know if it was a good
plan, but it gave us structure.”
Walker was founded in Pius’ living room, its birth
coinciding with the birth of his son. What that meant was that when potential
clients came over for a meeting, he had to quickly tidy away the diapers and
baby detritus to transform his apartment into something resembling a
professional ad agency.
The domestic juggling didn’t last long though. After hitting the phones hard in search of new business – as a creative, Pius describes it as the hardest thing to do – he landed his first client, Toilet Duck. But it was the powerful outdoor campaign ‘Not here, but now’ for Amnesty International in 2007 that really put the fledgling agency on the map. The shocking posters were created to remind the public of human rights abuses happening just a few hours’ flight from Switzerland – and they ended up netting a Gold Outdoor Lion at Cannes. That year, the agency was named Newcomer Agency of the Year across the Germanophone advertising world.
[Amnesty International - Not Here But Now]
Ten years later, Walker is no longer found in Pius’ front
room. It has won countless awards. It has found creative success with clients
like Amnesty International, Greenpeace, and, most recently, Fisherman’s Friend.
But that tagline, ‘the smallest agency in the world’, lives on. The agency never
has more than ten full time staff and instead works with a network of
freelancers which allows it to remain nimble and flexible, adapting to clients’
needs.
The agency is based in Pius’ hometown of Zurich, not
necessarily known as one of Europe’s major advertising hubs, but the current
line-up is incredibly international and includes talent from Sweden, Bangkok
and Italy.
“We speak this really odd English – Swenglish!” says Pius.
“It’s caveman-like. In meetings – which we don’t have very often – it means you
have to pitch your ideas in really simple language. You can’t circle around it,
you have to get straight to the point.”
Caveman speak aside, Pius has another secret weapon for
bringing together multiple cultures for one common goal: humour. It’s something
that bubbles through when you chat to Pius and moreover, their advertising work
on the funnier end of the spectrum is, quite frankly, hilarious. There’s the
aforementioned Fisherman’s Friend campaign and last year’s Vikings spot for
photography brand iFolor, which sees image-conscious barbarians take to the
battle field.
“It’s a very efficient way to start your communication. We haven’t got the budget to get Anthony Hopkins!” says Pius of the power of comedy. “And down the line, when it comes to production I find it easier to work with people if you’re working on a script based on humour. It brings people from different nations together.”
But in between the laughs and the humour, Pius’ journey over
the past decade has also taken some less enjoyable turns. In 2010, he tried to
open up in China, but mismatched business culture, and the exhausting process of
flying to Shanghai twice a month meant the venture was ‘the disaster of my
life’. Still, it has been a useful learning experience.
“I think success is a very dangerous thing. People bet on
it, trust it… but it’s a liquid asset, it’s not there, it’s an illusion,” he
muses. “Failure is a vital part of creativity, if it doesn’t kill you. And this
China business nearly did!”
What’s more, Pius came back from his Chinese adventure with
a renewed focus, taking the agency back to its original, founding principle –
to concentrate on brilliant creativity and not world domination. And that’s
allowed him to pursue a different kind of growth. Increasingly the agency is
working more closely with clients on product development and business
solutions.
[Christmas commercial for ifolor - GRACE]
This is just the latest step in a creative journey that Pius
has been on his whole life. After leaving school, he found himself as an
apprentice in a basement laboratory sexing lice (no, really). The tedium
eventually got to him and one day he walked out – and found himself a new
apprenticeship as a package designer for Vichy face creams. That gave him the
skills to put together a book, which led to a job at Y&R Zurich – and from
there he went on to work in Berlin, Hamburg and London. It was in London, at
Leagas Delaney, where his creative arsenal took another leap.
“Tim Delaney did inspire me, to be honest. He said, ‘You’re
not an art director, you’re a copywriter.’
I had to start writing English headlines and they were bad… and I got
shouted at… but it made me start writing,” says Pius.
It’s a piece of tough love that encouraged Pius to think
harder about ‘the idea’ and as such, it’s had a huge impact on his career. And
now he’s taking that pure creativity to an even deeper level, finding ingenious
solutions for brands that go far beyond advertising.
“We are like the bird on the back of an elephant,” he says,
explaining that the smallness of the agency seems to make brands feel more
comfortable bringing them closer into their business. As Pius looks forward to
the next ten years of Walker, he’s thinking about growth, just not in terms of
the agency’s size.
So there you go. The smallest agency in the world turned out
to be quite a big idea.