If you read Ogilvy's book on advertising (and you should), you might  remember his original ad seeking creative directors, which he called  Trumpeter Swans.
Ogilvy  was looking for personal genius, he said, and inspiring leadership. I  like the imagery -- marketers as trumpeter swans: they want to stand  out, and as I interpret it, they are enthusiastically creative and not  afraid to flaunt it. 
So, where are these swans? I sit  in meeting after meeting with marketers, designers, B2B and B2C  marketing managers,  CEOs, web guys, the lot, and it's like spending an  afternoon in the morgue: no excitement, no buzz, nothing. It's as if  these men and women are going to the gallows later in the day.
Marketing  is 90% enthusiasm about your product, your service, your company. This  excitement is essentially what we impart through ads and pr, etc.  Passion goes a long, long way in marketing and in life. Why then is it  in such short supply these days?
Marketing is meant to  be creative, thought provoking and entertaining. How can it be any of  these things when both clients and agency types are so low key, so ho  hum, so boring?
If you don't have enthusiasm for what you do, stop doing it and try something else.
If  I'm a company looking for an agency, I want to see three things:  intelligence, creativity and enthusiasm. Two out of three ain't good  enough. All three or nothing. 
From the agency  side, I want to see the same traits in potential clients. Those who come  to us with no excitement or enthusiasm, dragging their feet to the  meetings, acting as if they're being forced to market and with no  passion in their product offering or company... well, these clients will  fail no matter what we do or try to do for them. Why get started and,  as an agency, why get tarred by the brush of boredom these clients will  surely bring? 
Two rules about marketing that  have not changed since day one: frequency works no matter how mediocre  the marketing; and, enthusiasm is the most important ingredient to a  successful campaign or ad. 
OK, here's the third: start with a quality product or a superior service... quality breeds enthusiasm.
 

 
