30 Aug Diversity issues in the advertising world still hit a raw nerve for black professionals
First published in the Daily Maverick 168 weekly newspaper.
Stop talking about diversity in the integrated marketing communication sector and just get on with it already.
It’s hardly news: the industry (and clients) have talked about a lack of diversity for years and yet, in 2021, at the most prestigious marketing conference in Africa, such conversations are still being had – and needed.
It wasn’t the only discussion at the recent Nedbank IMC Conference – held virtually for a second year in a row because of the pandemic.
A host of top local and international speakers spoke powerfully about stories that sell, improving the industry in the pandemic era, opportunity, the power of going viral, and averting a crisis, but when Monalisa Zwambila and Sylvester Chauke spoke from the heart about not being heard or seen in a sector both feel so passionate about, it hit a raw nerve.
Chauke, the founder of marketing and brand consultancy DNA Brand Architects, has helped shape some of the biggest brands in SA, including Nandos, MTV, Comedy Central, DStv and Coca-Cola.
Chauke and his agency have won many accolades, most recently being named the Adweek Top 100 Fastest Growing Agency for 2020 and a PRISM for Campaign of the Year in 2019.
“Our industry is an exciting industry,”
Chauke said
If the industry was brutally honest with itself, Chauke said, it would face up to its biggest problems: not making space for difference, fearing speaking out, and walking on eggshells about diversity.
In 2019, DNA Brand Architects became the first black-run ad agency to win a PRISM Award, Africa’s most sought-after PR award. In 2021, they won the first black-owned Best Large PR Agency of the Year.
It was really cool, Chauke admits, but also “kind of embarrassing in a country that is serving majority black consumers. And I think that that is something that we need to look at quite closely… As an agency founder and chief, I fully understand the real fear that sits amongst agencies, the fear of long-term client relationships being at risk of extinction.
As a result, there is not enough honesty coming from clients and agencies. The barriers are real, and they’re reinforced for many, many people.
Zwambila agrees. As the founder and CEO of the full-service Riverbed Agency, she is on the board of the Association of Communications and Advertising and the Advertising Regulatory Board.
She is an industry veteran, with a string of awards behind her, including the MarkLives Woman of the Year for 2020, but it has been “a journey … of struggle, challenge, resilience and celebration”.
Many of the challenges have come from a lack of diversity in the industry, she says, so when she was asked to speak about making diversity in marketing the star of the show, it was a topic close to her heart and soul.
Almost 30 years after the fall of apartheid, the gender disparities remain enormous. “We’ve got gender pay gaps, amongst a plethora of other challenges that women face, and these barriers really create a problem for women to succeed not only in our industry, but broadly as well.
There has been progress, Zwambila says. Women have done amazing things, especially women of colour – the first woman of colour is now the vice-president of the US, and Ellen Sirleaf Johnson became the first woman in Africa elected as president of her country.
It shows that black excellence is starting to be recognised. Yet, although change is happening and can be applauded, the reality is that it should make us uncomfortable too, Zwambila says.
Citing Mark Lives data, Zwambila says the advertising industry’s revenue is about R7-billion, and that close to 70% of that market share is held by multinationals through network agencies; the rest of the market is held by network agencies or independents, and only 5% of that is held by black agencies.
This is wrong, she says, and something needs to change.
It’s demoralising, she says, to be told their agency is too small to do the work when other agencies are given opportunities.
Black agencies are tired of being “given a chance”.
“We want to be given an opportunity. Change is critical.”
“We want to be given an opportunity. Change is critical.”
This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper which is available for R25 at Pick n Pay, Exclusive Books and airport bookstores. For your nearest stockist, please click here.
Author:Georgina Crouth
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