Monday, September 29, 2025

17201: Underrepresented Voices Having Their Say.

Advertising Age published another Hispanic Heritage Month perspective, imploring brands to engage underrepresented voices.

 

This op-ed comes from the CEO of Lerma Advertising, a multicultural marketing shop with historical ties to The Richards Group—now known as TRG.

 

Don’t expect any color commentary from Stan Richards.

 

Why brands must lead with underrepresented voices to grow

 

By Pedro Lerma

 

I’ve been in this business long enough to know one thing: The future doesn’t look like the past. Too many marketers are clinging to what they believe is the “mainstream,” afraid that if they lean into underrepresented voices, they’ll lose their base. But here’s the truth: The mainstream doesn’t look like it used to. America doesn’t look like it used to. And neither do the audiences driving growth. So, what to do?

 

The case for the underrepresented

 

First, we need to get real. The “underrepresented” aren’t niche audiences. They are cultural powerhouses who represent enormous growth opportunities. And the underrepresented are different for each brand.

 

Whether it’s Hispanic Americans, Black Americans, Asian Americans, women, LGBTQ+ communities or people with disabilities, they aren’t sitting on the sidelines. They’re creating businesses that drive our economy, the music we dance to, the books we read, the shows we binge, the fashion we wear, the food we crave, the podcasts we stream, the slang we speak and the movements we follow.

 

Kantar research shows that 75% of all consumers say a brand’s degree of representation influences their purchase decisions. That means when you lead with underrepresented voices, you have an opportunity for “positive spillover.” In leading with the underrepresented in stories based on universal human truths, you’re not just talking to the underrepresented—you’re deepening your connection with your legacy customers, too.

 

What holds brands back?

 

I get it; it’s not easy. In today’s environment, every campaign lives in a political context. And that makes brands and agencies nervous. But here’s the reality: staying homogeneous doesn’t protect you; it exposes you. Playing it safe is a mirage and a one-way ticket to irrelevance.

 

Some brands worry they’ll alienate their core audience. My experience? The opposite happens. When you tell a story with empathy, nuance and cultural fluency, it resonates universally. You don’t lose people; you pull them in.

 

Here’s how brands have succeeded:

 

Earn the right to tell the story

 

First, don’t fake it. I once pitched a concept about gender pay equity to an automotive client. They loved it, but believed they still had work to do internally before they could authentically tell that story. It was a humble and wise move on their part because audiences can smell performative behavior from a mile away.

 

Invite them to the table

 

Include people from the community you’re representing in your creative development and validation process. The right voices early on make all the difference.

 

Start with the story, not the segment

 

I loved this Amazon ad featuring and narrated by a user experience designer who is deaf. While I have not experienced hearing loss, Brendan’s story still moved me deeply and made me feel better about the brand. I also expect that people who are deaf or have experienced hearing loss feel seen in a deeper, more personal way.

 

Make underrepresented audiences the hero—not the afterthought

 

When Modelo celebrated Hispanic NFL players and mentorship, it wasn’t about being political. It was about empowerment.

 

Design for cultural relevance, then scale universally

 

Cheerios once told a story about an interracial family. It meant a lot to that specific audience, but it also appealed to any parent of a precocious kid.

 

Use cultural catalysts

 

With the World Cup and Olympics on the horizon, brands have the chance to consider important questions like “Will our communications follow past recipes?” or “Will we use these massive moments to feature new heroes in our storytelling?”

 

Be humble

 

Get ready for feedback—and listen. If you miss the mark, own it. Respond with humility and a willingness to grow. That’s how you build trust that lasts.

 

Leading with underrepresented audiences is a superpower, and the choice is clear: Cling to yesterday’s assumptions, or embrace tomorrow’s audiences. Those who do the latter will not only grow their revenue—they’ll be shaping the future.

 

When brands make space for everyone, everyone shows up.

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