Black Wieden+Kennedy Employee Critiques Agency’s #BlackLivesMatter Statement

brandon burns 2Wieden+Kennedy’s decision to replace its homepage with a statement on the #BlackLivesMatter movement last week has earned attention and/or praise from quite a few observers and media outlets including our parent company, AdAge and even the Washington Post. This despite the fact that the agency never promoted or discussed it directly.

The message, which started as an internal email written by a black employee, remains on the site as of this post after Hill Holliday removed a similar statement from its home page.

One observer, however, is not quite as impressed.

Brandon Burns is a copywriter and experience designer who has worked for Leo Burnett, MRM//McCann, Proximity BBDO and, for the past year, Wieden+Kennedy Portland.

Today he published a must-read Medium story in which he simultaneously praises W+K’s move and claims that every single agency he worked for previously “engaged in actions that broke the federal laws prohibiting discrimination in the workplace.”

What does that mean?

“…while my personal career has been net-positive, along the way I have lost jobs to objectively less qualified candidates, I have fought, and won, a case of racial-based wage depression, and I’ve even had to report a manager to HR for harassment, only to be fired by the accused 24 hours later.”

Burns then asks a big question: will W+K’s tacit support of #BlackLivesMatter change the fact that the vast majority of its leaders, creative and otherwise, happen to be both white and male?

Those looking for a straight-up takedown will be disappointed. Burns acknowledges the agency’s own efforts to address this discrepancy, writing:

“As a hiring manager, I worked very closely with the in-house recruiting team; I am well aware of their valiant efforts to find new talent of all races and genders. Yet, nevertheless, when they share the portfolios of the best candidates with the Creative Directors?—?93% of whom are white males?—?it is, time and again, the white male candidates who are pursued and hired.”

Burns very clearly states that no one at W+K has exhibited racist tendencies to his knowledge. But he also names humanity’s inherent tribal sensibilities as the reason for the ad industry’s overwhelming whiteness, writing, “The creative director always has a reason why he hired, promoted or gave preferential treatment to someone who happens to look like him.”

He goes on to suggest several ways in which any given agency might move from sentiment to action on the diversity front, listing blind portfolio reviews, regular standardized performance reviews, and universal metrics for raises and promotions. His main idea is that agencies define “success” more objectively in order to avoid the sort of (often unconscious) traits that lead white men to hire and promote other white men.

Burns’ post may be the best-written take on the diversity issue that we’ve read, at least in recent weeks. It ends by encouraging white people to simply try and understand minority perspectives rather than reverting to “Wait, you think I’m a racist?!”

A W+K spokesperson has not gotten back to us about the story, just as the agency declined to comment on the site itself.

(Image via LinkedIn)

Ex-Ad Creative Opens Up Marketplace for Local Products from Around the World

wandertrade

It took a year’s worth of what he describes as “blood, sweat and Red Bull,” but Brandon Burns has finally realized his vision that is Wander&Trade, which the ad creative-turned-entrepreneur claims is “the first marketplace for local products from around the world.” We can’t determine how accurate that is, but regardless, W&T is essentially a one-stop shop that includes everything from clothing and condiments to accessories and home goods from local indie vendors in cities such as Brooklyn, Portland, San Francisco and London.

According to Burns, whose ad career included creative stints at the likes of R/GA, Leo Burnett, MRM/McCann and BBDO/Proximity China, supporting local operations “means putting profits back into their communities to pay skilled humans to make more quality products, not into the hands of big corporations to make more machine-made crap.” From what we’ve been told, Wander&Trade is expanding into New England next week and will offer up some products from Africa within days while Chinese and South American goods should be available in time for holiday shopping (Burns adds that there’s currently a waiting list of 80+ vendors).  For those of you who are in a shopping mood (and just because we love you), type in the code AGENCYSPY at checkout for $10 off an order of $75 or more. It’ll be valid until EOD tomorrow.

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