We live in a Mad Men world
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Transcript of We live in a Mad Men world
We live in a MadMen world
An ocean of sexist messages
When the public is offended, the agency or the brand answer it was just humor,
trivializing the issue
But sexism is real and lethal as we can see in this Google autofill ad from UN Women
And brands do not only foster gender stereotypes but also price women and men products differently
Products marketed for women and girls are more expensive
La tasa rosa
1.400$
En España las mujeres cobran un 19,3% menos que los hombres a pesar de tener la misma formación y desempeñar las mismas funciones.
Algunos ejemplos de diferencia de precios:
más que los hombres por productos iguales.
Según un estudio del Departamento de Consumo de Nueva York, las mujeres pagan un 7% más que ellos por los mismos productos.
Pero solo el 1% de la riqueza mundial está en manos femeninas
Población
Riqueza
Según la revista Forbes, las mujeres americanas pagan cada año El 50% de la población
del planeta son mujeres
42%
Mujeres Hombres
Fuente: Estudio “Gender Pay Gap” de la Comisión Europea, 2015
(1.267 €)
+ 7%
Se analizaron 794 productos:
de los casos el precio de la versión femeninaera superior
18%el precio de la versión masculina era superior
En las redes sociales se anima a denunciar estas desigualdades con la etiqueta #womantax
-19,3%
40,75 €
42,30 €
Lima electrónica
49,50 €
57,00 €
Perfume
6,40 €
6,51 €
Coloniainfantil
13,90 €
23,90 €
Juego de construcción
44,90 €
48,90 €
Moto de juguete
And it’s a terrible strategic mistake
9
“The advertising “The advertising “business is a $33B industry. Misunderstanding female consumers, from a business perspective, is sheer lunacy.Kat GordonFounder, The 3% Conference
6
Women control 73% of consumer purchasing and $20 trillion of the world’s annual consumer spending.2 They are more active on social networks and more likely to share a brand’s message with others.3 Women also represent the majority of early tech adopters4, social gamers5, and are amassing wealth at rates that will culminate in control $22 trillion of US wealth by the end of this decade.6
But perhaps the figure that matters most comes from Greenfield Online for Arnold’s Women’s Insight Team, where 91% of women reported they didn’t think that advertisers understood them.
In short, the consumers who brands should want to fall in favor with most report overwhelming dissatisfaction with the way brands speak to them. While good creatives are trained to market anything to anyone, a 97% skew (now recalculated to 89% skew) creates a level of groupthink that represents a group not holding the consumer reins.
The advertising industry does not have a recruitment problem, but a retention problem when it comes to gender diversity in creative departments. Portfolio schools are graduating equal (if not greater) number of women than men. Yet these same women “disappear” from the field right around the time they have the appropriate level of experience to be CDs. The 3% Conference tackles the many reasons why: lack of mentorship, lack of visibility of female CDs, award show jury bias, lack of support for motherhood and other factors.
WHAT AGENCIES NEED TO DO
Agencies that care about gender diversity can’t improve upon their current state if they don’t know what it is. A company-wide audit is needed to set current benchmarks before agencies can accurately measure whether their efforts at diversity are fruitful. The same holds true for ethnic and cultural diversity, which also are not reflective of the current consumer landscape, nor are widely measured and tracked.
More progressive ads generate more engagement, visibility and
brand impact
WHY then?
Still few women at the top of the ad world
1
Ever since The 3% Conference came into existence in September, 2012, countless reporters, students and ad folks have reached out to ask where the 3% statistic comes from. While the fi gure itself is widespread, its origin is not. The number comes from a 2008 dissertation by Kasey Windels, then a graduate student at the University of Texas at Austin. In “Proportional Representation and Regulatory Focus: The Case for Cohorts among Female Creatives” 1 and her subsequent conference paper, “An Exploration into the Representation of Female Creatives in Today’s Advertising Agencies,” Ms. Windels painstakingly checked the gender of award winners in the 1984, 1994 and 2004 Advertising Annuals of Communications Arts. She found just 3.6% of Creative Directors were female.
ART DIRECTORS
CREATIVE DIRECTORS
3.6%
9.6%
COPYWRITERS
11.6%
PERCENTAGE OF WOMEN IN THESE ROLES
The advertising industry is still massively run by middle-aged white men
September, 2014Sponsored by:
FEMALE CDSON THE RISE
Sponsored by:
ON THE RISEON THE RISESEPTEMBER 2014
A 2014 study of women serving as advertising Creative Directors
Which explains the resistance to change
But the ad industry is only reflecting our cultural
archetypes
Our meta stories are sexist
FromallpowerfulZeusswallowinghiswifeMethis andgivingbirthbyhimselftoAthena
TotherapeoftheSabines
Wherenomeansyes
FromthetemptressEve,causeofhumankindfallfromParadise
ToPandorawhoopenedthewaytoallevil
Createdfromman’srib
Fromvirtuous,faithfulandexpectativePenelope
Tofairytalesprincesseswaitingontheirdeathbedforakisstocomebacktolife
It is hard to escape from the saint/whore dichotomy
From Marie and Marie Magdalena
Myths create reality• Myths present ideas that guide perception,
conditioning us to think and perceive in a way, especially when we are young and impressionable.
• We learn what is socially acceptable.• Key for women: myths from male deities
religions give a specific image of what itmeans to be born female: second mate, gullible, to blame for pain, guilty, less wisethan men, not of god’s image, tempting man to do wrong.
Importance of creation myths• Gender symbolism in creation stories
proves a reliable guide to sex roles and sexual identities in a given society.
• Peggy Reeves Sanday: out of 112 creation stories, 50% male deity, 32% divine couple, 18% female deity– When masculine story, 17% of fathers cared for
infants.
– When couple, 34%
– When woman, 63%
We have lived 3.000 years of sexist endoctrination
• The symbolic devaluating of women is one of the founding metaphors of the Western civilization.–Messages from the Bible
–Messages from Greek philosophes
–Messages from psychoanalysts
These myths are so embedded in our psyches that we don’t notice
them any more• We have internalized them. Both men and
women.• They seem natural, and thus invisible.• And the effect on our psychologies and
self-esteem is tremendous
But these myths are false, they are created narratives we need to unlearn
We need to reclaim our true story
And become the heroines of our own lives
We need new stories• We need to create new myths, new
archetypes• You have the choice of the narrative• Which story do you want to tell?• Our world is changing, our stories need to
change too.
Like system vision shift from Ptolemaic to Copernic
We need to shift the stories from male-centered to humanity-centered
Which initiatives are shifting the balance?
1. Kasey Farris Windels, “Proportional Representation and Regulatory Focus: The Case for Cohorts among Female Creatives,” University of Texas Libraries
2. 2009 Boston Consulting Group
3. Alex Hillsberg and David Adelman, “Most Popular Social Media Sites Review: Why Women Are The Real Power Behind The Huge Success Of Pinterest and Tumblr,” FinancesOnline.com
4. Alexis C. Madrigal, “Sorry, Young Man, You’re Not the Most Important Demographic in Tech,” The Atlantic
5. Mathew Ingram, “Average Social Gamer Is a 43-Year-Old Woman,” Gigaom.com
6. “Financial Categories Where Untapped Sales to Women Are Worth Trillions,” Harvard Business Review
11
Started as a passion project to spotlight a huge business opportunity in advertising — the lack of female creative leadership and its impact on connecting with an overwhelmingly female marketplace — The 3% Conference has grown exponentially since its 2012 launch. Today it is a fully fledged movement: encompassing a 600-person, 2-day annual conference in San Francisco and multi-city “road shows” throughout the world, along with a vibrant online community, agency consulting, and a student scholarship fund.
3percentconf.com
FOOTNOTES
September, 2014Sponsored by:
FEMALE CDSON THE RISE
Sponsored by:
ON THE RISEON THE RISESEPTEMBER 2014
A 2014 study of women serving as advertising Creative Directors
3
The percentage of female Creative Directors in the Communication Arts 2013 Advertising Annual reached 11.5%. That’s a 319% increase.
WORKPLACE CULTURE1 #ClockOutConcept – Create a hashtag for brilliance
that happens off the clock and outside the office. This combats the dangerous habit agencies have for valuing availability over creativity.
2 Host a skill-share day where employees can show off some of their hidden talents (playing music, photography, pastry arts, etc.). Complement this with a “Fun Facts” board about co-workers that celebrates how people spend their free time.
3 Implement a “no assholes” role and enforce it. Margaret Keene, Mullen
4 Implement a “no interruption” policy and enforce it.
5 Create a “Sorry” jar and fine anyone apologizing $1. You can still say “pardon me” or “after you” to demonstrate politeness, but kill the self-diminishing instances of women apologizing before they share a thought or ask a question. Use your sorry jar proceeds to host an improv class or other professional development.
6 Invite clients to your office expressly to discuss the issue of diversity and how you can both work together to support it. In an era where agencies are eager to deepen client relationships, proactively addressing an issue that affects a client’s bottom-line shows a true spirit of partnership.
7 Check to see how many women are on the board of your holding company. If none, or few, shoot the CEO an email with the following links: bit.ly/1uEdxPG and bit.ly/1nEk5cm.
8 Implement and promote a variety of flexible work options, including workforce exit and reentry opporctunities, and support women returning to positions of equal pay and status. Flex-time is also proven as a great tactic to retain millennial employees.
9 Establish a clear, unbiased, non-retaliatory grievance policy that allows employees to comment or report on treatment in the workplace.
10 Banish the term “women’s account” from your vocabulary. Virtually every consumer category is dominated by female influence, including automotive and electronics.
11 Enable telework and make it a company policy that flexible work schedules should not affect anyone’s opportunity for advancement. Ernst & Young
12 Amplify the ideas of women in meetings. By reiterating a thought shared and attributing it to the woman who offered it, you endorse worthy ideas and ensure the appropriate person is remembered for them. Christina Knight, INGO
13 Mentor someone (or several someones).
14 If you have a women’s initiative, consider calling it something business minded, instead of a “Women’s Initiative.” Include men in every meeting. Otherwise it’s an echo-chamber of women talking to other women about women.
15 Explore the idea of job sharing to retain valuable employees, especially during transitions where full-time work may not be an option. Offering a very skilled employee 50% of the time is often more valuable to a client than a lesser-skilled employee being at their beck and call. IPA
MEN16 Be open to mentoring young women, no matter if
others make suggestive jokes. Young women need your guidance more than you know.
17 If your company has a women’s initiative, attend meetings and get involved.
18 Download our Manbassadors BINGO card and post it in your office. Aim to try one new microaction each week.
19 Join the 3% community and contribute to our blog’s “The 97% Speak” series.
20 Read up on implicit bias and stereotype threat. Talk with your team about key takeaways.
21 Give women the floor in meetings and ensure they’re not interrupted when speaking.
100THINGSYou Can Do Right Now To Help Drive the 3% Number UpwardThanks to the many individuals, agencies and companies who have contributed here, many of whom are recognized in pink type.
Dove campaigns
Axe Find your magic
Ariel Share the load
URUFARMA Uruguay
Cannes Lions festival created a new award to recognise advertising that
challenges gender norms
Sandbergsaidinanemailthatshewelcomedtheirvoices.“Brandshaveimmensepowertoshatterstereotypesandoverturnclichés.”
It was not banned by the Advertising Standards Authority despite more than 200 complaints.
Consumers reacting to ads
Same in Germany
Male leaders are taking a stand
Your job is to take part in the change of the myths
What are you going to do to shift the balance?