Advertising Age reported on an Advertising Week workshop hosted by Droga5 Engagement and Inclusion Director Tiffany Edwards. The event was titled, “Beyond Diversity Talk,” yet Edwards appeared to deliver the stereotypically contrived and clichéd diversity drivel. Forget the facts that Droga5 is Diversity0; and the White advertising agency staged a notorious sexual harassment scandal too. Sorry, but Chief Diversity Officers rarely go beyond diversity talk. Indeed, all they seem to do is talk—while the exclusive majority fails to listen.
Employees aren’t off the hook either, says Tiffany Edwards
By I-Hsien Sherwood
To tackle diversity issues, agency leaders and employees must work toward the same goals, but often at very different tasks. This was the central lesson of “Beyond Diversity Talk,” a workshop at Advertising Week New York hosted on Tuesday by Tiffany Edwards, engagement and inclusion director at Droga5.
As with most diversity panels, she began with the business case for multiculturalism. But she sped through the data—no one ever attends a diversity panel to become convinced, and “at this point, if we don’t know the business case for diversity, we’ve probably made the choice to shut it out,” she noted.
Edwards then split her advice into two channels of actions that should be taken simultaneously—one for business leaders and one for “the people on the ground doing the work.” For example, leaders need to stop leaving all the diversity and inclusion work to the people with diversity and inclusion in their titles.
“Writing a check or attending awards shows are not the only actions you can take,” she said. At the same time, people of color and members of underrepresented groups need to take initiative and stop relying on leadership or even D&I staff to make change.
First, leaders need to identify an area of diversity their organization needs to focus on initially. Edwards insisted that issue should almost always be race, an opinion she acknowledged some people might disagree with. “If race isn’t the baseline, people of color tend to get left out of the conversation,” she said, citing the women’s rights and LGBTQ rights movements, both of which have struggled with extending the full benefits they’ve gained to people of color.
And while most agencies are increasing diversity hires, they’re having trouble keeping them. “Put real systems in place for their advancement,” Edwards said, and give people of diverse populations decision-making power.
In addition, leaders need to mentor and sponsor diverse talent, and not just “people you like or connect with,” she said. One of the benefits of a multicultural workplace is learning from people we might not naturally gravitate toward.
As for entry- and mid-level employees, they need to hold leaders accountable, Edwards added. Ask what issue the organization has decided to focus on first. And act as allies to people who may be struggling with bias at work.
That might mean that white employees discuss diversity and white privilege and hold each other accountable even when people of color aren’t present. Or it could mean becoming an active and official participant in the work. “A lot of people assume you have to be a person of color to be part of a diversity committee, or you have to be a woman to be part of a women’s committee,” Edwards said, “but everyone should come into the room and join the conversation.”
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Things Diversity Officers Do:
Talk about diversity
Host workshops about diversity
Host brown bag lunches about diversity
Throw diversity workshops
Be on panels about diversity
Host diversity matchmaking sessions
Write think pieces about diversity
Let small POC children know about advertising as a career choice
Help make XYZ Diversity History Month print ads using free stock photos
Help write text about diversity for annual reports
Things Diversity Officers Don't Do:
Hire anyone diverse at ad agencies
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