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Why Diversity and Inclusion Matter to Your Audience

Feeling like you belong satisfies one of the most fundamental of human needs. You probably remember Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs from a college psychology or marketing class. In “A Theory of Human Motivation,” Abraham Maslow posited a hierarchy of needs placing love and belonging in the middle. It’s that sense of belonging that fuels the fundamental idea behind diversity and inclusion at work.

Companies that value diversity and inclusion employ executives to attract and retain a diverse set of employees. According to Fortune magazine, 47% of companies on the S&P 500 Index have a Chief Diversity Officer or equivalent. Two-thirds of those were hired in the last three years.

Diversity and Inclusion in Marketing

Marketers know that audiences want to see themselves in their messaging. Savvy marketers know that audiences are evolving as our population becomes more diverse. But how do you ensure your marketing messages speak to a diverse population? You go to great lengths to make sure it’s bias-free.

Imagery

Bias-free imagery goes way beyond showing a kid in a wheelchair trick-or-treating on Halloween. Unless your marketing personas strongly suggest otherwise, consider including an array of images in your messaging.

Skin Tones: Biology and origin suggest multiple differences generally categorized by race and ethnicity. Marketers who want to attract new buyers depict their audience with a combination of skin tones:

Broad definitions of ethnicity point to shared language, country of origin, religion, and other cultural expressions. These can help inform and broaden how you depict your audiences or the ones you want to attract. 

Naturally, there are risks. Though race and ethnicity are not detectable in the human genome, exclusion and prejudice run rampant these days. Modern marketers show a spread of people in their materials and refuse to show them engaged in stereotypical activities. Think about testing your materials with the people included, especially if your team lacks the diversity you’re seeking to portray. 

Key Definitions

Genders: The World Health Organization tells us “gender refers to the social constructed characteristics of women and men. It varies from society to society and can be changed.”

Fully inclusive marketing materials go well beyond our grandparents’ binary norms and definitions. They include imagery that depicts a spectrum of gender identities and expressions. Making a deliberate decision, while avoiding stereotypes, reflects the reality of our species’ ever-evolving human condition. 

Sexual Orientations: Depicting images based on the idea of sexual orientation is tricky because it can involve stereotypes. However, depicting an image of two men or two women parenting normalizes the idea the anyone can be a parent. It helps eliminate the stigma associated with it. You may recall the Honey Maid graham cracker “This is Wholesome” campaign. Not only did their TV spot include gay parents, it also featured blended families, interracial families and immigrant families. When challenged, the brand stood by its message, broke down barriers and advanced cultural norms with its inclusive message. 

Shapes, Sizes and Ages: Unless your product and service specifically targets a hyper-specific profile, such as a young, ultra-fit consumer, you can further diversify your target audience by showing short, tall, ample, thin, old, young, and in-between people who could benefit from your product or service. 

Abilities: Those who live with a range of physical/cognitive abilities have enough challenges without marketers marginalizing them by exclusion. 

Marketing for Everyone

The WHO defines disability as an interaction between individuals with a health condition and their personal and environmental factors. About 15% of people live with some form of disability or nearly 50 million people in the U.S. Consider including people in marketing materials with a wide range of ability. You might show people using assistive devices and technology, such as white canes (for those who are blind) or red and white canes (for those who are blind and deaf), walkers, prosthetics, scooters, hearing aids, ramps, reachers, comfort animals, book holders, closed captioning or voice-activated, augmented-reality or virtual-reality equipment.  

Including people with a range of abilities in our marketing materials will help associate good feelings with the brands. We play a role in how people are perceived by society, so wholesale inclusion may even help close educational, financial and healthcare gaps people with varying abilities often face.

Bias-Free Language

Perhaps the most important thing to consider when writing to avoid bias is to recognize and protect your readers’ humanity. Cultural bias stems from assumptions about those who are different from us and can lead to more than just stereotyping. It can perpetuate a stigma, discrimination or worse. Here are some guidelines for changing unconscious bias into culture-conscious, inclusive messaging.

Skin Tones: Unless racial/ethnic descriptors are relevant to the materials, there may not be any reason to specify skin tone. If there is, ask people in your target audience how they prefer to be described. For example, people who are native to America may have specific ways they like to be described, such as Native American, First People, or members of the Cherokee Tribe.

Genders: Use a mix of pronouns. Or better yet, use the pronoun “they.” Avoid “girl” when you mean “woman,” and “boy” when you mean “man.” Also, avoid using “man” or “mankind” to describe people; instead, use “women and men.” Finally replace “man-made” to “synthetic” or “artificial.”

Sexual Orientations: Unless someone’s sexual preference is integral to the materials, it’s probably irrelevant to reference it in writing.

Shapes, Sizes and Ages: These qualities are generally visible in marketing imagery. If text descriptors are needed, say, for screen readers, use bias-free language such as:

“Someone who stood four feet four inches” rather than “a dwarf.”

“Someone born before 1940” rather than “an elderly person.”

Abilities: For those with diverse abilities, it’s best practice to use person-first language and to avoid language that connotes pity. 

A biased example: the paraplegic

A better example: the man in the wheelchair

A biased example: the woman who suffers from muscular dystrophy

A better example: the woman who has muscular dystrophy

Final Word

You can perform research, test creative in focus groups, and release marketing content in test markets. But you never really know if a message will resonate with an audience until it’s running. Chances are you got it right. But if you didn’t, a feedback loop, hashtag campaign or customer survey will let you tap into consumers’ impressions. Real-time feedback gives you the chance to admit your gaffe, revise your messaging and reset your marketing efforts.

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

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