WWD Digital Daily

GLAAD and P& G on Corporate Impact

Sarah Kate Ellis, Shelley McNamara and Alex Keith spoke on a panel about the power of corporate culture in furthering acceptance, equality and inclusion.

- BY ELLEN THOMAS

Corporatio­ns play an

important role when it comes to the conversati­on around promoting inclusion, acceptance and equality for the LGBTQ community.

This was a key point made by panelists, GLAAD president and chief executive officer Sarah Kate Ellis, Procter & Gamble chief diversity and inclusion officer Shelley McNamara and Alex Keith, P&G’s ceo of its global beauty business, during the first session of the morning at WWD’s Culture Conference.

Ellis, a former media executive who moved over to GLAAD six years ago, spoke about the organizati­on’s commitment over the years to placing LGBTQ storylines in the mainstream media, dating back to the AIDS crisis in the Eighties. But the organizati­on’s reach has extended far beyond Hollywood and publicatio­n — it now works with companies on fine-tuning their messaging around LGBTQ outreach and acceptance. “Now, cultural epicenters are everywhere,” Ellis said. “Ceo’s are leaders of culture and what they say now matters sometimes more than celebritie­s.”

She spoke about the importance of companies in being vocal allies to the LGBTQ communitie­s, particular­ly as Gen Z grows up — GLAAD’s research indicates that 40 percent of Gen Z identifies as LGBTQ, versus 20 percent of Millennial­s. “If you don’t market and become part of the movement, you will be left behind, as a product, service or company today because it is such a big part of our population,” Ellis said. “If you’re going to do it [ just] for your bottom line, please do — if you can’t lead with morals and values, we’re here to help you.”

Joking aside, she did advise strongly against “pinkwashin­g” — marketing with no authentici­ty behind it — and urged companies to find a genuine way to market to their consumers their commitment to including and recognizin­g the LGBTQ community.

She pointed to Procter & Gamble as a company that has made strides in communicat­ing authentica­lly its commitment to the LGBTQ, ticking off several examples, including a documentar­y released on CNN about the struggles of LGBTQ employees at P&G in the early Nineties.

Things have changed at P&G since then, said McNamara, the company’s chief diversity and inclusion officer, a relatively new role. McNamara, spoke to the importance of corporate policy changes in communicat­ing to the LGBTQ community that they matter and are equals. Before 2001, for instance, McNamara’s partner and one of her three children were not included on her company’s life insurance or health-care policies, because they were not recognized as her family members. Policy shifts at P&G changed this, and she said the company is still “on a journey” of equalizing LGBTQ h.r. policies. For instance, the company recently issued a policy allowing gay males at the company parental leave to bond with a new baby. “Policy changes are really important because they communicat­e to people what matters and allows for [alleviatio­n of ] differenti­ation in privilege,” said McNamara, who also stressed the importance of giving LGBTQ employees access to the same benefits and policies as straight employees. “At the core of the conversati­on, it’s relationsh­ips and the power of being allies,” she said.

Alex Keith recognized the power of being a vocal ally when a colleague told her that he was preparing to come out, and that he was fearful of repercussi­ons he might face in the workplace. “It really made me realize that I had to move from being to what I now call a silent ally — someone who was an ally but an ally when I needed to be — to be a much more vocal public ally in terms of creating a culture and team environmen­t and internal environmen­t of inclusion and acceptance.”

Keith’s role extends beyond creating an internal environmen­t that is safe and accepting for the LGBTQ community

— she is also tasked with marketing the company’s efforts to do so to its consumer base. She talked about some of the work Pantene is doing as an example. The brand recently partnered with Dresscode Project on a campaign highlighti­ng trans people. “Ultimately the science of Pantene is transformi­ng damaged hair to healthy hair, and the power to transform has become a much broader platform around the role that hair can play in a particular trans person’s journey,” Keith said. “We know that 60 percent of people going through their trans journey change their hair as one of the first outward signals of personal expression, and Pantene has elevated [the theme] of transforma­tion from a product [standpoint] to a [brand theme].”

 ??  ?? Sarah Kate Ellis,
Alex Keith and Shelly McNamara.
Sarah Kate Ellis, Alex Keith and Shelly McNamara.

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