Skip to main content

Success Quote by David Ogilvy

"The pursuit of excellence is less profitable than the pursuit of bigness, but it can be more satisfying"

About this Quote

Ogilvy is doing something rare for an ad man: admitting the scoreboard is rigged. “Bigness” reads like the natural habitat of modern business - scale, market share, budget, headlines, the comforting illusion that growth equals virtue. It’s the kind of goal investors can count and boards can applaud without needing to understand the work. By contrast, “excellence” is stubbornly hard to quantify; it shows up in craft, taste, and the long game, the stuff that doesn’t always spike a quarterly report.

The sentence works because it refuses moral purity. Ogilvy doesn’t pretend excellence is the most “successful” path. He concedes profitability to bigness, which makes the second clause land harder: satisfaction isn’t a consolation prize, it’s a different currency. The subtext is both a warning and a permission slip. A warning that organizations will drift toward the measurable - bigger campaigns, more clients, more awards, more noise - even if the product gets blander. A permission slip for anyone inside the machine who suspects the real payoff is pride in the work, not dominance.

Context matters: Ogilvy built one of the great agencies of the 20th century, a period when mass media rewarded scale and the “big idea” could blanket entire nations. He knew exactly how profitable bigness could be, and his point is almost confessional: if you chase growth alone, you may win the market and lose the plot.

Quote Details

TopicBusiness
Source
Verified source: Confessions of an Advertising Man (David Ogilvy, 1963)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
In my opinion, delegation has been carried too far in some of the big agencies. Their top men have withdrawn into administration, leaving all contact with clients to juniors. This process builds large agencies, but it leads to mediocrity in performance. Ihave no ambition to preside over avast bureaucracy. That is why we have only nineteen clients. The pursuit of excellence is less profitable than the pursuit of bigness, but it can be more satisfying. (Chapter I: "How to Manage an Advertising Agency" (page number not determinable from the available scan text)). This quote appears in David Ogilvy’s own book (a primary source). In the available digitized text, it occurs in Chapter I (“How to Manage an Advertising Agency”). The scan shown is an Atheneum edition that still states copyright 1963; therefore the first publication year is 1963. The scan text does not provide a reliable printed page number for the quote (the HTML rendering shows line numbers, not original pagination).
Other candidates (1)
How to Start a Marketing Ad Agency (Fahd Khater, 2024) compilation95.0%
... Ogilvy & Mather's David Ogilvy famously advised , " The pursuit of excellence is less profitable than the pursuit...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Ogilvy, David. (2026, February 17). The pursuit of excellence is less profitable than the pursuit of bigness, but it can be more satisfying. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-pursuit-of-excellence-is-less-profitable-than-6335/

Chicago Style
Ogilvy, David. "The pursuit of excellence is less profitable than the pursuit of bigness, but it can be more satisfying." FixQuotes. February 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-pursuit-of-excellence-is-less-profitable-than-6335/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The pursuit of excellence is less profitable than the pursuit of bigness, but it can be more satisfying." FixQuotes, 17 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-pursuit-of-excellence-is-less-profitable-than-6335/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by David Add to List
Excellence less profitable than bigness but more satisfying
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

David Ogilvy

David Ogilvy (June 23, 1911 - July 21, 1999) was a Businessman from England.

47 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

William Makepeace Thackeray, Novelist
William Makepeace Thackeray