Advertising
week is always a dizzying array of too many interesting panel choices. It is
always difficult to choose - do I go to Data? Programmatic? Creative? Content?
This year I began with the Talent and Empowering Women tracks that explored
both the challenges and the personal triumphs that still need to be navigated
through conscious and unconscious biases.
The Transgender Journey
Chris
Edwards' emotionally fascinating talk, The
Ultimate Rebrand: What We Can Learn From One’s Transgender Journey was of
particular interest to me because my cousin is transitioning from male to
female. Edwards’ relayed his personal story of navigating through gender
identity at a time when it was not only unusual but also misunderstood and
mislabeled. "Sexual orientation is who you go to bed with. Gender
orientation is who you go to bed as," he explained. Born female, Edwards
was able to use his skills as an advertising creative (EVP Group Creative
Director at Arnold Worldwide) to "rebrand" himself and become the
person he always felt he was.
Using his
marketing experience, he decided first to evaluate the landscape. In 1995, the
term transgender was not yet in use. The word was transexual which had very
negative connotations. Edwards had to navigate through the terminology. The
next step was to determine his brand message, which to Edwards was to be open
and honest about the transition. Then he sought to develop a solid
communication plan by engaging brand evangelists (close friends and business
associates) and then, taking into account executional considerations, roll out
his "re-branding". His advice was that "We need to acknowledge
that we all have prejudices. The best way to help overcome prejudices is to
tell your personal story rather than have edicts coming down from the
organization. We need to feel empathy."
Diversity Recruitment and Retention
ESPN's panel
on achieving diversity offered a good perspective on how to best achieve racial
diversity in the corporation. And the issue is not just achieving diversity; It
is also retention and inclusion in the workplace. As Marc Strechen, VP Multicultural
Marketing at Diageo North America, explained, "We need to develop train
and nurture talent. We believe in the freedom to succeed. People are held
accountable at Diageo." Jack Myers, Media Ecologist, Chairman MyersBizNet,
noted that although there are still big challenges in achieving diversity,
there have been some recent inroads. "The recent General Mills
announcement that requires all of their agencies' talent pools to reflect their
consumers shows that clients can step up and be leaders." His work with
the 1stFive.org summer intern
event was held at Turner is year and included past interns to help create a
sense of community. "Our efforts are focused on retention to keep them in
the industry. We find mentors and encourage them to also be mentors to senior
people in the industry."
But change
cannot bubble up from the bottom. According to Molly West, VP Global Business
Operations at ESPN, "If we want a cultural shift in a corporation, we have
to do it from the top down." Myers agreed and said, "One of the
biggest challenges is that we are talking to ourselves. We need to find ways to
get changes at the senior management level. Men need to have zero tolerance for
sexist, misogynistic and racist comments in any context, whether it's small
private gatherings of men, or in their companies and advertising.”
Women's Empowerment
A subject
close to my heart, the two panels I attended on women’s empowerment covered
those who are trailblazers such as firefighter Regina Wilson who is the first
female president of the Vulcan Society and those who have cracked the glass
ceiling such as Geri Wang, President of ABC Sales. Both panels offered personal
stories and perspectives on how success can be achieved and what challenges
continue to vex.
Despite the
advancements made by women in the workplace, we are still a long way from true
equality. Women are still underrepresented in C-suite management and on
corporate boards. There is still income disparity (Women earn only 79 cents to
every dollar a man earns). Women communicate differently than men and this difference
often prevents women from being fully included in discussions. Their ideas can
be negated until “seconded by a man” as Nadini Ramani, Vice President at
Twitter, explained. “Just being a woman changes everything,” she added.
Conclusion
I would like
to think that as awareness of the importance of diversity increases in the
workplace, we would enter a golden age of inclusion where anyone can go as far
as their talents will take them. But I am still unconvinced that this will
happen any time soon.
One of my
previous employers had many women in leadership positions when I first joined
the company but ten years later, a much smaller percentage of women occupy the
upper echelons. Check any new start-up in the media field – from programmatic
to data to technology - and chances are there will be no African Americans or
women either in their C-Suite line positions or on their boards. If we are all
truly committed to inclusion, let’s at least retain the diverse talent we have
and create more representation on boards.
This article first appeared in www.MediaBizBloggers.com
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