Sinead O’Connor, 29.06.17
Last week, I headed to the French Riviera for the Cannes Lions 2017. Except for ending up at Gutter Bar (if you know, you know) until 3 am with some of the industry’s finest, I got a lot out of just 48 hours at the world’s biggest and best festival of creativity.
Here’s a couple of takeaways.
PR is finally being represented
On Monday, PR Week published a piece entitled ‘This is the time for PR to shine’. This article noted that this year changes had been made to the Cannes Lions awards process. A revised definition of PR meant that our ‘corner of the industry’ has been better represented. ‘Fearless Girl’ is a prime example of this. Winning the Grand Prix award, the in-house PR team at State Street was congratulated for the comms strategy around the Wall Street-defying artwork on International Women’s Day.
However, according to PR Week, just seven of the 100 Lions awards had a PR agency listed as the entrant/credited with “idea creation”. Ad agencies are still dominating.
So what can we do about this? As an industry, we need to continue to challenge clients to drive creativity. We must ensure PR is at the forefront of integrated campaigns.
Last year we worked with Reuters on a campaign for Canon. The Commercial Director there speaks of a change in the way that briefs are coming over to them. He was open that he’d made an assumption in the early days of us working together. He thought I was calling from an ad agency as, typically, campaigns of this nature would not have come via PR. Reuters says that piece of work was the most successful campaign they ran last year. This proves that there is a place for PR at the table.
Diversity remains a big talking point
Cannes 2016 was all about diversity in the workplace. It explored how we can ensure a better representation of women and ethnic groups in our industry. This year, unsurprisingly it’s still a key trend. We were never going to solve the problem in a year after all. However, it’s good to see a shift in the way that brands talk about diversity. Global organisations are making open, public commitments to solving the problem, backed by tangible results.
I went to a great panel session, hosted by Teads, on the topic.
One of the panellists was Matt Derella from Twitter. He said the company won’t allow any of its employees to sit on a panel if all the other panellists are men. Jacki Kelly, the COO at Bloomberg Media spoke about the launch of the Gender Equality Index and the ‘Walk the Talk’ CEO interviews. These interviews discuss what business leaders are doing to solve the gender pay gap.
At the session, She Runs It presented some research in partnership with LinkedIn and EY. It found that a slim number of senior women in the industry make it to the C-Suite. I was saddened by this, but not surprised. Like many, my initial reaction to conversations around women not being on boards was to blame focusing on family over career. However, the research proved me – and many others – wrong. The biggest reason women don’t make it to the C-Suite is endorsements. Men more aggressively network and are better at recommending each other. At the same time, women are less likely to promote themselves and, importantly, each other in the workplace. Of course, you have to take it with a pinch of salt, given LinkedIn was the proxy for the research. But you can’t argue with the numbers.
“A woman asking another woman for help is the same as a man asking for directions”, said one panellist.
I like to think that I already work in an environment where women champion each other. But it’s given me food for thought about what else we can be doing. Particularly to support the more junior women in the team.