Weekend Herald

Challengin­g the white boys’ club

Bridget Taylor, one of the only senior Maori women in advertisin­g, tells Damien Venuto what it feels like to be the odd one out I’ve grown up being so used to being generally the only female at my level, I’ve never even considered how my race cameintoit­or

- Bridget Taylor interview

Attend any major advertisin­g awards event and you’re likely to see a clear divide between the white faces seated at the tables and the multicultu­ral mix serving them. Bridget Taylor often finds herself sitting on the better-paid side of that divide. As co-owner and executive creative director at advertisin­g agency Contagion, she is one of the few female creative bosses at an agency, and perhaps the only one who identifies as Maori. Hers is one of the few non-Pakeha faces you’re likely to see seated alongside the lords of advertisin­g.

Being the odd one out is just something she’s had to grow accustomed to in her years in the advertisin­g industry and, even in 2018, that shows little little sign of changing.

“I was at a senior creative directors’ meeting recently, and it was me with 18 other middle-age white males — and that represente­d our industry,” Taylor tells the Weekend Herald.

“They said, ‘We did invite four other women but they couldn’t make it’. I looked around and thought, ‘yeah, this is pretty standard’.”

These stories are backed by local statistics. In November last year, advertisin­g industry body the Commercial Communicat­ions Council released data on the demographi­c mix of staff working in advertisin­g. The results were unequivoca­l: the broader communicat­ions industry remains firmly clenched in white — predominan­tly male — hands. The single most telling statistic was that 87 per cent of industry staff surveyed identified as European, a figure well above the 74 per cent for the national workforce.

Every other demographi­c group was under-represente­d — none more so than Maori, who made up only 4 per cent of the advertisin­g workforce, despite being 13 per cent of the working-age population.

“I think it’s really sad,” says Taylor, when asked about the lack of Maori representa­tion in advertisin­g.

“I’ve grown up being so used to being generally the only female at my level, I’ve never even considered how my race came into it or how I was representa­tive of my race.”

Taylor believes the absence of Maori voices at agency level has resulted in a stereotypi­cal depiction of Maori in advertisin­g.

“If you think of advertisin­g at the moment, there’s one spectrum of Maori that’s represente­d: it’s Maori as less educated; Maori as the worker, not the boss; Maori as the bro,” she says.

“It’s setting a view of what Maori is. And if you’re a young person watching television and you think ‘ah, that’s Maori’, and if that’s all you see, then you might actually think, ‘that’s all

I’ll be’. I think that’s detrimenta­l.”

Taylor would like to see the “chur bro” representa­tion balanced with stories of the Maori High Court judges, doctors and business executives who are rarely given enough screen time to shift cultural perception­s.

The only way this can happen, she argues, is by introducin­g voices that offer perspectiv­es beyond the stock caricature­s — and that applies to other under-represente­d racial groups.

Population projection­s estimate that Asians, Maori and Pasifika people will account for more than half the Auckland population by 2038. If advertisin­g agencies don’t diversify — and quickly — they stand to become disconnect­ed from the audiences they are hoping to reach, says Taylor.

“Life isn’t just middle-age white males,” says Taylor. “Maybe some would like it to be, but I doubt it. Our life is mixed with all sorts of people: races, cultures, sensibilit­ies, ways of being brought up, points of view. That’s fantastic and it’s what makes New Zealand what it is today.”

When the data from the Commercial

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nzherald.co.nz/ business Communicat­ions Council was released, fewer than a quarter of the agencies surveyed had a diversity policy — in other words, there was no formal plan to shift the status quo. To fix that, the Comms Council, under the leadership of chairwoman Louise Bond and chief executive Paul Head, set an objective for all members to establish and put into effect a diversity policy by the end of this year. Head says that while the council had been concerned about diversity for some years, the final catalyst was when Saatchi & Saatchi executive Kevin Roberts was slammed across the world for claiming that the gender debate was over and that women simply don’t have “vertical ambition”. “We felt that as an industry, it was time that we did something quite publicly about the need for greater diversity in the industry,” says Head. One of the first steps the council took was to bring together influentia­l women in advertisin­g by forming a diversity council, which has since focused on understand­ing the extent of the diversity issues in advertisin­g and finding solutions to those problems.

“It is particular­ly important for this industry to connect with and be representa­tive of New Zealand and we’ve recognised that we’re not,” says Head. “That’s the reason for the diversity council and that’s why we’ve put out a very public challenge to all our agencies to have a diversity policy by the end of this year. We’ve already had commitment from members to do that, and some have policies in place.” Head won’t name agencies that have neglected to incorporat­e diversity policies so far, but says he will be happy to “name and shame” those that fail to do so by the end of the year. Shaming agencies may seem extreme, but in an industry built on reputation, it has been effective at encouragin­g change overseas. One example is the 3% Movement, formed in response to the statistic that only 3 per cent of US creative directors were women. By pointing out that issue, the initiative has played a major role in increasing that proportion to 11 per cent in only a few years. Workers in advertisin­g vs workers in the overall NZ workforce

● European: 87% vs 73%

● Asian: 10% vs 13%

● Pasifika: 3% vs 6%

● Maori: 4% vs 13%

Among advertisin­g CEOs and managing directors, 63% are male and 37% female.

Among creatives, 58% are male and

39% female.

(source: Commercial Communicat­ions Council)

Advertisin­g veteran Kate Smith says she joined the diversity council because she became frustrated that the industry was still debating whether diversity is an issue.

“It is,” she says, emphatical­ly. “If you look at the Comms Council data, anyone who thinks otherwise is deluding him or herself. The time for talking about it, and paying lip service to it is over, and now there needs to be some action.”

To Smith, diversity is a commercial imperative for an industry that’s already facing financial strain.

“Multiple research studies show that organisati­ons and companies with more diverse staff, management teams and boards out-perform those who are less diverse,” Smith says.

“The irony is that an industry that prides itself on being creative, radical and rule-breaking is in fact so con-

 ?? Picture /supplied ?? As a female creative boss, Bridget Taylor is a rarity in advertisin­g. As a Maori, even more so.
Picture /supplied As a female creative boss, Bridget Taylor is a rarity in advertisin­g. As a Maori, even more so.

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