Home Resources The Weakest Link Series: The Agency Compliance The Weakest Link Series ADMA’s “Am I the weakest link: Privacy edition” explores the idea that the privacy data chain is made up of six main parties – the marketer, the consumer, the platform, the agency, the government, and the board – all with the potential to be ‘the weakest link’. However, each of these parties contribute in different ways to the standard of data practices in Australia’s economy. Can we really point the finger at any one party? In this article series, we will deep dive into each of the links in the chain, assess the areas for improvement and how marketers can help strengthen the chain overall through their own roles. The Agency Whether it be media, creative, digital, or data-centric, agencies play an essential role in how data is interpreted, activated, and operationalised across the marketing ecosystem. Agencies often act as an executional extension of a brand’s marketing team, and in doing so, they regularly handle personal and/or sensitive consumer information. However, this proximity to data also places agencies in a position of great responsibility when it comes to consumer privacy. Therefore, making agencies another critical link in the data privacy chain. In this article, we will explore three key weaknesses agencies contribute to the privacy chain including fragmented accountability, a culture of speed over security, and inconsistent data handling standards. Each of these challenges introduces risks that marketers and agencies must urgently address to protect the integrity of the chain. Fragmented accountability One of the most persistent and problematic privacy chain weaknesses for agencies is their issue with fragmented accountability. This occurs when multiple teams or individuals handle data without clear ownership or defined responsibilities, leading to gaps, miscommunication, and increased risk of privacy breaches. For agencies, from creative to media planning and performance analytics, it is not always clear who is responsible for ensuring privacy compliance at each stage. This decentralisation often leads to miscommunication and gaps in governance, particularly when teams are siloed or client-agency relationships are layered further with subcontractors. When data obligations are not clearly assigned, mistakes are more likely to slip through the cracks. Some likely mistakes include sending data to the wrong party, failing to anonymise sensitive fields, or overlooking regulatory consent requirements/assuming consent has already been obtained at another stage. The solution to address this issue lies in refining and implementing data governance frameworks with clearly defined data ownership roles and privacy obligations. Agencies must build and maintain a culture of shared accountability, with cross-functional teams trained to understand their responsibilities in the privacy chain. Designating a privacy lead or embedding privacy-by-design protocols into workflows can also help close the gap and reduce risk. A culture of speed over security Agencies are under relentless pressure to keep costs low from restricted budgets, hit campaign KPIs and stay ahead of the next trend. All while delivering responses at pace. However, this culture of urgency often comes at the cost of privacy. Quick data uploads, inadequate audience segmentation, or unvetted third-party tool usage can all expose weak points in the data privacy chain. This is not due to a lack of care by agencies, but rather a misalignment of priorities. Security and compliance are often seen as blockers to creative and media agility. When speed becomes the default mindset or priority, robust privacy practices are often sacrificed. Whether that be skipping privacy protocols or defaulting to convenience over consent. To remedy this, agencies should consider including privacy as a performance metric. Just as campaign delivery times and ROI are monitored, so too should privacy obligations. Secure data transfers, correct consent usage and documentation, and adherence to data minimisation principles should become standard and expected client deliverables. Inconsistent data handling standards Agencies often work with a wide range of clients, platforms, and technology stacks. While this diversity is a much-loved feature by agency employees, it can also create inconsistency with data handling practices. When there’s no standardised approach to data collection, storage, transfer, or deletion across different clients and tools, the result is a patchwork of privacy practices. This inconsistency is especially concerning as agencies often inherit data from brands that may have already been poorly collected or incorrectly consented from the outset. If that data is then shared or used further by vendors or platforms without due diligence, agencies risk perpetuating the privacy problems they inherited. What’s needed is a unified data handling policy by agencies that applies across clients, platforms, and projects. Agencies should develop baseline data privacy standards that comply with the Australian Privacy Act and even international regulations like the GDPR depending on the scope of their clients’ work. Then agencies will need to ensure all staff and subcontractors adhere to them. Conducting regular privacy audits and insisting on standardised data handling processes across client engagements will go a long way in both safeguarding agencies and their clients, as well as mitigating this weakness in the data privacy chain. Strengthening the agency link Agencies are strategic partners to marketing teams. However, their access to consumer data also makes them potential points of weakness in the privacy chain. Fortunately, the issues of fragmented accountability, speed over security prioritisation, and inconsistent data handling standards can be addressed. By investing in training, building out privacy governance structures, and embedding compliance into everyday practice, agencies can not only meet growing legislative expectations but also become true champions of consumer trust. For marketers working with agencies, this means asking tougher questions and demanding transparency. For agencies themselves, it’s an opportunity to lead by example, adopt privacy-by-design principles, and turn data responsibility into a competitive advantage. Next month in the Weakest Link series, we’ll delve into the Government and what weak points they are contributing as an active party in the data privacy chain and provide solutions as to how these weaknesses can also be remedied. Want to sharpen your privacy and compliance skills? Check out our regulatory course offering with a range of options to suit your needs. From our online short courses to our more comprehensive Privacy and Compliance for Marketers course, ADMA has your regulatory upskilling needs sorted. 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Filter Resources Filter Courses Capability Capability Campaign Integration Compliance Customer Experience Marketing Technology Insights Learnings Brand Development Content Format Content Format Information sheet Member-only Press-release Article Blog Case Study Data Event Infographic Media Coverage Research Tool-kit Video Webinar Whitepaper Topics Topics CMO Crib Sheet CMO Spotlight Global Forum Global Forum 2023 Privacy Awareness Week Privacy series Regulatory Spotlight Resource The Weakest Link Compliance Resources CEO Blog Compliance Regulatory Content Copywriting Creative Data Data-driven Marketing Digital Campaigns Leadership Social Media Thought Leadership 09th Jun 2022 17 mins Do Not Spam: Spam Regulations Spam is unsolicited electronic messages which usually arrive through email or SMS. Unwanted marketing messages is one thing, but these days spam can also be synonymous with scams, phishing and outright fraud where dangerous links and viruses can lead to theft and privacy breaches. Click to read more about Australia's Spam regulations. Article 09th Jun 2022 12 mins Privacy: Marketing to Build Trust In Australia, our concept of privacy hinges on how we define ‘personal information’. Privacy is regulated by the 1988 Privacy Act and 13 Australian Privacy Principles, called APPs but is a developing area with plans afoot to update Australia’s Privacy Act. Read more about your obligations when handling personal information. 09th Jun 2022 25 mins ADMA Regulatory and Advocacy Working Group The regulatory and compliance landscape for data-driven marketers is constantly evolving. There are a range of regulators and industry bodies across Australia and we encourage all marketers to seek advice best tailored to their business. We regularly call for industry input into the reviews and reports we submit to governments and regulators. To stay informed, please sign up to our newsletter. SPAM TOOLKIT 03rd May 2022 12 min Spam Toolkit: Direct Marketing and the Laws Around Spam Free download: ADMA's SPAM Toolkit 02nd May 2022 10 mins Navigating a Constantly Changing Privacy and Data Regulatory Landscape The compliance and privacy landscape constantly changes. A snapshot of key global events that have led up to the ongoing discussions about Data Privacy law reform in Australia - included in ADMA's presentation at the iMedia Modern Media Summit in March 2022. Article 29th Apr 2022 6 min Apple CEO’s newest privacy pivot is something all businesses should think about CEO Tim Cook's call to IAPP’s Global Privacy Summit for tougher privacy protections should have all data-driven marketers’ strategising towards their own privacy-first marketing ecosystem Load More
09th Jun 2022 17 mins Do Not Spam: Spam Regulations Spam is unsolicited electronic messages which usually arrive through email or SMS. Unwanted marketing messages is one thing, but these days spam can also be synonymous with scams, phishing and outright fraud where dangerous links and viruses can lead to theft and privacy breaches. Click to read more about Australia's Spam regulations.
Article 09th Jun 2022 12 mins Privacy: Marketing to Build Trust In Australia, our concept of privacy hinges on how we define ‘personal information’. Privacy is regulated by the 1988 Privacy Act and 13 Australian Privacy Principles, called APPs but is a developing area with plans afoot to update Australia’s Privacy Act. Read more about your obligations when handling personal information.
09th Jun 2022 25 mins ADMA Regulatory and Advocacy Working Group The regulatory and compliance landscape for data-driven marketers is constantly evolving. There are a range of regulators and industry bodies across Australia and we encourage all marketers to seek advice best tailored to their business. We regularly call for industry input into the reviews and reports we submit to governments and regulators. To stay informed, please sign up to our newsletter.
SPAM TOOLKIT 03rd May 2022 12 min Spam Toolkit: Direct Marketing and the Laws Around Spam Free download: ADMA's SPAM Toolkit
02nd May 2022 10 mins Navigating a Constantly Changing Privacy and Data Regulatory Landscape The compliance and privacy landscape constantly changes. A snapshot of key global events that have led up to the ongoing discussions about Data Privacy law reform in Australia - included in ADMA's presentation at the iMedia Modern Media Summit in March 2022.
Article 29th Apr 2022 6 min Apple CEO’s newest privacy pivot is something all businesses should think about CEO Tim Cook's call to IAPP’s Global Privacy Summit for tougher privacy protections should have all data-driven marketers’ strategising towards their own privacy-first marketing ecosystem