Tuesday, May 07, 2024

16632: Delayed WTF 59—Havas CEO Yannick Bolloré On AI, DEIBA+, And BS.

 

MultiCultClassics is often occupied with real work. As a result, a handful of events occur without the expected blog commentary. This limited series—Delayed WTF—seeks to make belated amends for the absence of malice.

 

The following Cannes interview is about a year old—and a companion to the WPP CEO Mark Read performative PR covering the same AI and DEIBA+ topics—yet warrants color commentary too.

 

Havas CEO Yannick Bolloréposter child for nepotism in Adland—delivers another monologue that feels AI-generated and Chief Diversity Officer-delegated.

 

Bolloré’s DEIBA+ dedication is declared via heat shields advocating for girls with autism and people with disabilities, worthy causes that represent divertsity vs diversity—and Eurocentric divertsity to boot.

 

Contrary to their canned contentions, the CEOs of holding companies—especially those like Read and Bolloré, who are White male multimillionaires leading lives of extraordinary privilege—might be least capable of grasping the imperatives for authentic diversity. Hell, their true understanding of AI is probably equally uniformed.

 

The result is a mindless merger of corporate cluelessness and cultural cluelessness, rivalling the clumsy combinations of White advertising agencies routinely orchestrated by White holding company leaders.

 

Holding company chiefs on AI and inclusion: Yannick Bolloré

 

In the first in a series of interviews with the holding company chiefs ahead of Cannes, Havas’ Yannick Bolloré answers questions about the role of both in his business

 

By Yannick Bolloré

 

With the Cannes Lions festival about to celebrate its seventieth anniversary, and with pressure from both within and outside holding companies for demonstrable change, we asked the holding company chiefs to talk about the role of diversity — and how AI could impact upon it.

 

As CEO of Havas, what lessons have you learned about the role of diversity in the success of your business, and the work you do for your clients?

 

Diversity is paramount to us at Havas, as our business relies on individual talent, vision, and creativity. We would not even exist without all the different backgrounds, cultures, and languages that fill our offices around the world, and work together to achieve better outcomes than they would alone.

 

We believe it is crucial to include a diversity of voices within our agencies, leveraging different perspectives to constantly push us forward. That is why we are committed to building an inclusive culture where everybody feels they belong, can be themselves and thrive. We have made it a priority to increase the diversity of our teams and ensure that inclusive thinking is at every stage of the strategy ideation process so that perspectives are integrated from the beginning to the end, to inform how the work gets created.

 

We also help brands better engage with their communities through authentic messages and experiences, by using the power of our creative ideas to drive meaningful change in the world we live in. Our recent campaigns “Me, my autism and I” for Vanish, which aims at giving a voice to young girls with autism, and “Paris Anne de Gaulle airport”, raising the visibility of disability in our society, are great examples of this ambition.

 

Critics say that AI is already reinforcing and exacerbating many challenges already faced by society, such as bias, discrimination and misinformation. How do you think this is going to impact the use of AI in advertising and marketing?

 

The development of generative AI is a revolution and there is no doubt that AI will play an increasingly important role in our industry. While exploring its fast-growing potential and using it as a source of inspiration and acceleration for all our areas of expertise, it is crucial for us to be very cautious about its legal implications, as well as its limitations in terms of inconsistencies, inaccuracies, and inherent biases.

 

It is our collective role and responsibility to focus on how AI can assist us and our creative minds in the development of our work, not the other way around, and continue making a meaningful difference to society as a whole.

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