A response to Adland: Thank you, but no thank you

A response to ADLAND: Thank You but NO Thank you.

I read an open to letter Adland yesterday and I’d like to respond with some thoughts. For those of you who do not know me reading this. My name is Shanice Mears and I am an advertising professional. I am the co-founder and Head of Talent at a creative company called The Elephant Room and I also do many other things around that. I cannot lie to you, writing this is somewhat difficult because there are so many things I’d like to say. I’m going to try my best to help you understand why that letter was just not good enough.

Firstly George Floyd’s death has shaken not only industries but the world, and it’s about time. Eric Garner, Sandra Bland, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, Philando Castile, Treyvon Martin to name a few all unarmed black victims who were shot by the police and denied Justice in America, but it took a video of 9 minutes to really uncover that this has been happening…Anyway.

My first point will talk directly to those leading and of influence who have pledged. How dare you? A part of me is thinking I’m suppose to be grateful, but in fact that’s how a lot of black people feel when they even get a job at an advertising and/or Brand in the first place a mindset thinking ‘Thank God they picked me’ not because they fear they aren’t good enough but because they fear being black would have set them back initially. Ask yourself as a white person, have you ever gone into work afraid of the hairstyle you have? Have you ever gone into work questioning if its ok to bring in something home cooked? Do you know what it feels like to be consistently asked where did you come from (in confusion)?. Chances are, probably not. And that’s your privilege.

As a young black female, who works very hard by myself and with my team that those who identify as non-white, especially black people have consistent support and access to opportunity without questioning is it the right thing to do. I have to ask myself is this genuine and are you ready to work?

I’d like to know why has it taken a man to die, a world to protest, an online movement telling you black lives matter for you to consider that black talent is worth investing in?

I write this pretty hurt. I won’t draw upon my own experiences right now but I could pull together a committee of my black friends and people I know who have suffered from systemic power trips and prejudice. White privilege. They have gone into work day after day being 1 of 5 or 8 or 10 in a company of 500, and have found themselves saying ‘today’s a new day its all good just firm it’.

Why are you so afraid to sit with us?

I don’t want to see 200 names of industry leaders who pledge for better or 10 ways of how to do - how convenient. I want to see your company policy, your actionable hiring methods (and the team doing it), your retention scheme. Your wellbeing offering, and your gender and 'BAME' pay gap figures.

 How are you servicing communities that do not look like you or do not have access to places and spaces you occupy?

Real commitment to breaking the system is uncomfortable, hard and challenging.

Black people want fair and equal chances without judgement, without fear, without pressure, without questions regarding their background or skin colour.

p.s - We are not ‘blacks’ and a lot of us do not refer to ourselves as people of colour or BAME, white people created those terms to avoid calling us black people and grouped us all together. but clearly now todays time should tell you that we are not just that. Call us what we are, black people.

Judith Vassiliades

HR Change Manager @ Ericsson | Transforming Talent Acquisition

3y

“I don’t want to see 200 names of industry leaders who pledge for better or 10 ways of how to do - how convenient. I want to see your company policy, your actionable hiring methods (and the team doing it), your retention scheme. Your wellbeing offering, and your gender and 'BAME' pay gap figures. You couldn’t have put it better Shanice, Pledges and words aren’t enough. We need to see change happen now and leaders should be accountable if it doesn’t.

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Hubert Grealish

Global Brands PR & Communications | London agencies to global leadership roles @ Diageo, Philips, TomTom, Europcar New Mobility | Versatile and agile communications, reputation and brand marketing.

3y

Yes, very well put.. Got to push through the smoke screen..."i don’t want to see 200 names of industry leaders who pledge for better or 10 ways of how to do - how convenient. I want to see your company policy, your actionable hiring methods (and the team doing it), your retention scheme. Your wellbeing offering, and your gender and 'BAME' pay gap figures."

Cindy Gallop

I like to blow shit up. I am the Michael Bay of business.

3y

Hear hear Shanice Mears. Fuck public pledges in Campaign. It's very simple, adland: ensure, then demonstrate, full Black representation on your leadership team and at every single level of your agency. Ensure, then prove, that Black talent is just as welcomed, hired, promoted, championed, celebrated, valued, compensated, bonused, rewarded and gets to thrive in your agency just as much as white talent does. And don't give us that 'diverse internships' shit. It doesn't matter how many Black people you bring in at the bottom, if you show them nowhere to go at the top. Hire into equal power with you brilliant Black women and men you feel threatened by. #BlackLivesMatter #DiversityAndInclusion

Jess Gosling

🔮 Head of International Futures and Planning I 🌎 PhD in International Affairs & Soft Power I 📢 LinkedIn Top Voice I 💥 Diplomacy/Tech/Culture

3y

Thank you for this Shanice, it speaks volumes. I couldn't agree more, we need to see more action than words. x

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