It's like an annoying zit that keeps reappearing; a nasty ear/nose hair that won't stop growing; an out-of-control cowlick that no amount of hair care product will tame; that idiot on Tinder who
won't stop messaging. Yeah, I'm talking about the topic of diversity in the advertising world. For years -- decades, really -- the industry has struggled with this problem and yet we still end up with
guys like Gustavo Martinez and the Campbell-Ewald dude who penned that ghetto day thing.
Following the J. Walter Thompson drama which featured CEO Gustavo Martinez getting fired for making
racist and sexist slurs, the agency, under the tutelage of new CEO Tamara Ingram, is launching a diversity and inclusion council in partnership with consulting firm inQUEST.
inQUEST will review JWT
policies to ensure they are up to snuff diversity- and inclusion-wise, and the program will also include a "talk-to-me hotline" which any employee can call if they have concerns with issues relating
to diversity and inclusion as well as anything at all with which they have concerns.
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In a video sent to JWT staff, Ingram explained the new program saying: "We fundamentally believe that
diversity and inclusion is essential if we are going to deliver the extraordinary work that we need to do, to transform and grow our clients business. We need to represent all people to get those
engaging insights that can deliver the engaging ideas that can make such a huge a difference for our clients."
In addition to the diversity program, Ingram has hired former Y&R Chief
Talent Officer Celia Berk to be JWT's Chief Experience Officer, a newly created role designed, specifically, to handle diversity and inclusion issues. Berk will manage the hotline and oversee the
council.
Whether or not this new effort will see success isn't clear. The ad industry has a long history of shirking diversity. All the way back in 2006, New York City Councilman Larry
Seabrook, who headed up a series of hearings on the subject, said, in reaction to agencies dissing the hearings in favor of "more important" Advertising Week events, agencies "ran like chickens with
their asses plucked clean."
While the solution to eradicating the ad world of white boy bro culture while fostering diversity and inclusion may seem complex, I see a simple solution: don't be
a dick. No, really. Don't be a dick. But do be polite. Do be respectful. Do treat your fellow co-workers as you'd like them to treat you. Do understand the fact that your boss, co-workers or
subordinates are male, female, black, white, pink, purple or otherwise is entirely irrelevant and all that matters is whether or not they can do their job.
There's even a tagline: Delivering
Diversity One Less Dick At A Time.