Tuesday, March 23, 2021

15366: New Poll Shows What Every Poll Since 1950 Has Shown—Adland Is Exclusive, Racist Industry.

 

Advertising Age reported on a new poll that showed marketing employees—which included advertising, communications and design workers—expressed “the most severe struggles with discrimination, unequal pay, lack of access to opportunities and disregard for their well being.” Other gripes included employers not actively recruiting for diversity, Black and Asian women feeling invisible and companies failing to make good on promises of commitment to DE&I. The most outrageous part? That anyone actually believed there was a need to poll people to collect these complaints—which have been common knowledge since, well, the beginning of the ad industry. Do we really need to collect the same points every decade? More importantly, why continue to tolerate the “leaders” who consistently shrug and confess, “We’ve got to do better…”—when will these White people be held accountable?

 

Marketing Jobs Report Highest Level Of Worker Discrimination, According To New Poll

 

By Mike Juang

 

Marketing employees reported the most severe struggles with discrimination, unequal pay, lack of access to opportunities and disregard for their well being, according to a recent survey from The Harris Poll and worker diversity group Hue.

 

Marketers, which in the study includes advertising, communications and design, were two-times as likely than those in other job functions, to report that their employer has not addressed recruitment of BIPOC, increasing BIPOC visibility or provided equal access to opportunities for BIPOC. And only one in seven marketers said employers were financially invested in promoting racially diverse employees.

 

The poll also found that Black women and Asian women were two groups most likely to not feel seen at work for who they are; 67% of Black men and 46% of Asian women said their employer did not address opportunities to advance their careers, compared with 33% of Black women, 28% of white women and 22% of white men.

 

At the same time, marketers were more likely to say that in the past six months their employers had “made a commitment to building a more equitable environment for employees of color” and “hired someone to lead diversity and inclusion,” showing the words of the marketing world may not be matching their actions. The poll, which was conducted in 2020, sampled 2,250 U.S. adults.

 

Advertisers and agencies have spent the past year pledging commitments to fighting racial injustice and inequality. (Ad Age’s longstanding blog tracks many of these developments.) Some in advertising are calling out what they see as commitments that lack follow-through, however. Earlier this month, media mogul Byron Allen called on major brands to fulfill their pledges to support Black and minority-owned media companies by threatening possible legal action against brands and agencies.

 

And this week the ad world responded to the hate crimes against the Asian, Asian American and Pacific Islander communities following shootings in Asian massage parlors in Atlanta that left eight people dead.

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