A new study by consumer goods conglomerate Unilever has found that nearly one in two people from marginalized communities–people with disabilities, and Black, Hispanic, Asian, and LGBTQ+ people–feel they have been stereotyped in some way through advertising. The study also highlights that it isn’t just marginalized people who feel the impact: 71% believe stereotypes in media are harming the younger generation, signaling the industry as the latest institution being called upon to step up, or risk people boycotting their products and services.
These findings have prompted Unilever to institute the "Act 2 Unstereotype" initiative, stepping up its commitment to fight prejudice and promote diversity and inclusion in its marketing and advertising.
Unilever’s research commissioned via Kantar shows that people are increasingly disconnected with advertising today: less than one in five believe that ads are representative of wider society, fueling concerns advertising could consign itself to history if it doesn’t rebuild its own image–and go further, in helping to build a better world.
The research also showed that those from underrepresented communities are impacted the most, and are up to 30% more likely to be stereotyped than the general population. In fact, a staggering 55% of women of Asian heritage believe that stereotypes in advertising don’t represent them; 46% of men with a disability say they often see negative portrayals of people like them in ads; and 66% of LGBTQ+ aged 18-34 believe people from diverse backgrounds are featured in ads “just to make up the numbers.”
Commenting on the findings, Tarana Burke, founder, The ‘me too. Movement, said, “Society and consumers are telling brands out loud that they are hurting. This is the moment for the industry to show it listens to marginalized voices. Underrepresented people need to not just feel included but be included. This is what will transform the messages we hear, the images we see, the products we use, and how each of these are created. The ad world must lend its talents to lead true change in society. It must listen to the people who are leading these lives and these movements, and ACT on what is heard. When anyone feels represented in the mainstream, it has the power to fulfill the fundamental human need to be heard–one that the industry can actually help deliver on.”
“Act 2 Unstereotype”
To address this, Unilever is broadening its 2016 commitment to Unstereotype, and is challenging itself to create marketing, not just advertising, that will help influence the next generation of people to be free from prejudice. Unilever’s “Act 2 Unstereotype” goes even deeper to make real, structural changes to the entire marketing process. It aims to provoke and integrate more diverse and inclusive thinking across every brand–from new product development through to advertising production. By serving more diverse people in a progressive way, Unilever believes its brands can be at the forefront of shaping a fairer and more inclusive world.
The actions that will help Unilever achieve its “Act 2 Unstereotype” vision are:
- To provoke inclusive thinking across the end-to-end marketing process from consumer insight, brand DNA and proposition, marketing mix development, creative development, behind the camera and on-screen portrayals.
- To ensure an Unstereotype Charter for every Unilever brand, outlining the ED&I commitments the brand will deliver through its marketing.
- To work with more diverse and underrepresented groups on screen and behind the camera.
- To eradicate any digital alterations to photography–a 100% ban on changing models’ body shape, size, proportion or skin color.
Aline Santos, chief brand officer and chief diversity and inclusion officer at Unilever, said: “If we want to see systemic change in society, we need to see systemic change in our industry. Act 2 Unstereotype helps brands create a generation free from prejudice. Inclusive marketing is not a choice anymore; we must act now.”
The launch is being supported by a host of influencers, activists and experts, including inclusive designer and disability activist Christina Mallon; broadcaster and cultural commentator Sideman aka David Whitely; and Jon Miller, founder and chair of Open for Business, the coalition of global companies promoting LGBT+ inclusion. They are featured in a short film produced by Unilever to highlight the need for the industry to act.
Unilever’s "Act 2 Unstereotype" commitments are in addition to the company’s existing global commitments and actions to help build a more equitable and inclusive society. Earlier this year, Unilever announced its Positive Beauty vision, with the ambition to eliminate the word “normal” from packaging and advertising across all beauty and personal care brands. Unilever also announced it would spend €2 billion (some $2.4 billion) annually with suppliers owned and led by people from underrepresented groups.
Juliette Welfling Takes On A Musical, A Crime Thriller, Comedy and Drama In “Emelia Pérez”
Editor Juliette Welfling has a track record of close-knit, heartfelt collaboration with writer-director Jacques Audiard, a four-time BAFTA Award nominee for Best Film not in the English Language--starting with The Beat That My Heart Skipped in 2006, then A Prophet in 2010, Rust and Bone in 2013, and Dheepan in 2017. He won for The Beat That My Heart Skipped and A Prophet.
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