‘Diversity drives creativity and business performance’
Jennifer English, Global Brand Director, Johnnie Walker at Diageo, on why consistency and inclusivity is key to commercial and creative success.
Efrain Ayala, Global Diversity and Inclusion Director, Marketing at Reckitt, on the danger of seeing diversity as a tick box exercise.
“I have seen many brands and storytellers distracted by diverse casting as a tick box exercise.” Efrain Ayala, Global Director of Diversity and Inclusion, Marketing at Reckitt, is pointing to the danger of seeing diverse casting as the only route to diversity.
Pointing to research showing that 88% of consumers across the globe do not feel seen in modern advertising Ayala said there is a real opportunity for inclusive leaders to drive meaningful change. “If you are talking about diversity and inclusion in isolation then you have missed the mark,” he explains.
Pointing to the example of Toyota’s Paralympic advert starring Jessica Long, which focused on her mother’s sacrifice. A story which could have been viewed to suggest that her life only had meaning because of her exceptional athleticism; a narrative which arguably upholds ableism.
He explained: “This is a common trope used to describe disabled children as a burden who can only be successful by being physically exceptional.”
Sharing his view on why representation isn’t enough Ayala pointed to the fact that the United Kingdom has the twelfth largest gender based healthcare gap in the world. Pointing to research showing that only one in ten felt they had enough information about the menopause and 4 in 5 women felt unheard by medical professionals he noted that by not understanding audiences advertisers can do real harm to culture. “When you understand the barriers you can see who is left behind,” he added.
The responsibility for the advertising industry, therefore, lies in understanding and harnessing the power of positive portrayal and relentlessly questioning bias. “Ads that only rely on diverse representation don’t work. We can’t rely on diverse casting to drive active influence in culture.” Instead, he believes that advertising needs to shift its focus to create casting briefs that are based on what the portrayal is rather than the physical attributes.
A relentless and ongoing pursuit that he believes will create ‘opportunities to change the game’ and will be driven by inclusive leaders. He explains: “A curious leader asks whose voice has been artificially amplified and whose voice has been left out.”
“Purpose is about fundamentally understanding the positive impact we can have on all our brands,” explains Ayala. At Reckitt, this purpose is crystalised through aligning each individual brand with a UN sustainability goal.
Advertisers have the opportunity to add depth and positive portrayal when they think beyond casting. “We need to think about portrayal on top of diverse representation,” says Ayala. In practice, this means that casting briefs need to shift away from using physical attributes in isolation.
“We need to bring our curious selves to the table and ask the questions that go unasked,” explained Ayala. He continued: “You need to be curious as your curiosity will change the game in these micro-moments.”
Image credit @ Bronac McNeill photograph
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