In a sense, the entrance to SFGT is a window into the person who leads the company, Dudley Fitzpatrick, CEO. Open the big front door of the old town house on Walnut Street and the first thing you notice is three old stone steps. Couldnโt they afford new steps? Then you see the second door. Itโs all glass and through it you see the modern reception room, the classic furniture, the attractive receptionist and the small oriental rug in the center of the beautiful wood floor. โI get it,โ you think to yourself.
When you meet Dudley and chat with him, you really get it. Heโs a traditionalist, like the steps and the beams on the ceiling. Heโs confident and assertive, like the stately furniture and the offices themselves. Heโs tasteful, like the oriental rug and like the conference room on the fifth floor. You go there for the interview after a trip on the modern elevator.
And Dudleyโs a trip.
This is a man who knows where heโs going, who wants to do it the right way, who has strong feelings about his beloved business. Notice that I didnโt say โhis beloved advertising business.โ He has different views about that way of looking at the business of marketing and advertising.
Life and career are quite different than he would have anticipated when he graduated from Miami University in Ohio. He got a degree in Mass Communication even though he says he went there primarily โto play hockey.โ While there, he discovered that โmovies were more funโ and decided that he would like to write movies. Off to New York, he โbummed around for over two yearsโ trying to connect in the film business and finally had to get a steady job.
He decided to settle for โ30 second moviesโ and he landed a job in the creative department of one of New Yorkโs biggest agencies, now known as Ammirati Puris Lintas. There, he worked exclusively on television and participated in network spots for Heineken, Diet Coke, Lysol and Mennen.
The agency was account-service dominated which influenced his firm belief that โstrategy and creative are really the same thing.โ That is an idea which continues to drive his work and the agencyโs intentions.
While in New York, he was recruited to a Los Angeles agency, Dancer Fitzgerald-Sample. He took the job and became their youngest ever vice president but he admits that he probably took it because making movies still had some intrigue for him. At D-F, he worked on their efforts to get accounts to supplement their Toyota business. The agency landed Pioneer Electronics which became one of his proudest successes. His campaign, โCatch The Spirit of a True Pioneer,โ led Pioneer to great success.
Dudley created and produced the first music-video commercial in the industry for his client, Pioneer. It was a takeoff on West Side Story. Because it reflected the social realities of that era, it was selected to be part of the permanent collection of the Smithsonianโs Cultural Mores Section.
Both Dudley and his wife, Tanice, were raised in New Jersey. They live there now, in Pennington, with their three children: Aubrey, Drew and Tess. The two older children go to The Lawrenceville School, Dudleyโs alma mater. The proximity to New Jersey was one of the reasons he responded to an opportunity at Lewis Gilman and Kynett (now Tierney Communications.)
He was very impressed by the quality of LG&Kโs work. As vice president and group creative director, he participated in what he calls their โglory yearsโ but was one of the victims of one of their many top management changes.
He and a good friend at LGK, Bob Schell, were both let go with quite limited severance. Fortuitously, they were contacted by Herrโs Potato Chips which offered them
the account if they wanted to start an agency. That was in 1992, the beginning of what is now SFGT. Herrโs was with them for 12 productive years. Today, the agency has 30 people and serves eight accounts. Interestingly, two of their accounts, Tylenol and Sunoco, are deeply involved in NASCAR racing.
Dudley feels that their work with NASCAR is one example of why he prefers not to be thought of as a traditional advertising agency. He insists that the agencies which rely primarily on โadvertisingโ for success are on the wrong track. His vision calls for an agency which is deeply involved in all aspects of a clientโs marketing communications activities. For SFGTโs clients, NACAR is one (important) ingredient in all-inclusive programs for the clientsโ core consumer markets, for clientsโ public relations focus and for clientsโ employee pride.
When asked about the account he is most proud of, he winces and reminds me that heโs proud of every account. Prodded, he volunteers that he is particularly proud of the work SFGT did for the opening of the Constitution Center. His feelings of patriotism seem to be reflected in the positioning they created for the Center, โThe Freedom To Be You. It All Starts With The Constitution.โ
Oddly, he says that the โdumbestโ and the โsmartestโ things he ever did in business are actually the same thing. โThe smartest thing I ever did was to surround myself with my two partners: Sarah Lenhard, Managing Director and head of Account Service and Dan Reeves, Managing Director and Executive Creative Director.โ The dumbest thing? โNot bringing them on board sooner.โ
That supports his conviction that the toughest part of the ad business is finding, hiring, nurturing and growing with good people. He worries about that because he finds it difficult to find candidates with outstanding talent, valuable experience and a good cultural fit. He also worries about the possibility that good clients may be losing confidence in agencies. He says, โAgencies have to be emotionally able to have complete confidence in themselves in order to be secure enough to warrant meaningful collaboration from clients and in order to provide optimal service.โ
Dudley Fitzpatrick is confident. Itโs apparent. Think about the old stone steps leading into the agency. Sure, they could afford something new but โoldโ has character and character is what he wants to project. Itโs apparent when you take the elevator to the spiffy conference room on the fifth floor. Thatโs another, positive message to visitors. Itโs apparent when you hear his straight forward answers to direct questions. Yes, Dudley Fitzpatrick is confident about his agency, about his vision of the business heโs in and about himself.
Author Bio
Allan Kalish founded, managed and sold Kalish & Rice, one of Philadelphia's largest ad agencies. He is currently chairman of Trichys, providers of extranet and intranet solutions for online collaboration and document sharing.

