Supplier diversity truly sits at the intersection of these other disciplines, and when applied to marketing/advertising can drive growth. As such it needs to be elevated.
A supplier diversity program is a proactive business program which encourages the use of women-owned, ethnic/minority-owned, veteran-owned, LGBTQ-owned, disability-owned, and small businesses as suppliers. ANA recently published, "The Power of Supplier Diversity," based on quantitative and qualitative research. The purpose was to gain an understanding of the incidence of supplier diversity programs, as well as benefits, challenges, spend, goals, measurement, influence, and more.
Our survey showed that75 percent of respondents had a supplier diversity strategy for the overall organization, but only 40 percent had a supplier diversity strategy specifically for marketing/advertising. For those with a supplier diversity strategy, the top segments targeted are women-owned (98 percent), ethnic/minority-owned (95 percent), veteran-owned (90 percent), LGBTQ-owned (88 percent), and disability-owned (80 percent).
Supplier diversity has many benefits to corporations. It provides opportunities for business expansion with the emergence of new consumer needs based on shifting demographics; it drives competition between a company's existing and potential suppliers, and it promotes innovation as diverse suppliers can offer new products, services, and solutions.
But supplier diversity in marketing/advertising is less mature than supplier diversity in the organization overall. Supplier diversity in marketing/advertising is younger, has less spend, and has fewer opportunities.
A basic challenge that many companies face is finding diverse suppliers in the marketing/advertising sector. In our qualitative research, it was noted by multiple respondents that the biggest line item for marketing/advertising for most marketers is media. Yet there are few diverse supplier resources for media — notably some radio and newspapers. Not even Univision, the Spanish-language television network, is considered a diverse supplier, as it is majority-owned by private equity. Nor are BET (ViacomCBS) and Telemundo (NBCU). Also, among agencies, many "multicultural" agencies are owned by holding companies and are therefore not classified as diverse suppliers.
FREE THE WORK (formerly, FREE THE BID) is a resource which provides "a curated talent-discovery platform for underrepresented creators." Originally established as a resource for production to include one female director on every triple-bid advertising job, FREE THE WORK has expanded into film, TV, and media, and its database of talent now consists of female and other underrepresented directors, editors, colorists, composers, and more. It's supported by founding partners Amazon Studios, AT&T, Facebook, Ford Motor Company, and Procter & Gamble.
The marketing/advertising industry would benefit from a broader resource list to identify diverse suppliers of all types – including women-owned, ethnic/minority-owned, veteran-owned, LGBTQ-owned, and disability-owned. To that end, the ANA will curate a list of diverse suppliers that work in our industry and ask others to contribute. See ana.net/diversesuppliers; we expect to publish an initial list of diverse suppliers sometime in June.
ANA learned a great deal about supplier diversity in our research and there is clearly more work to be done. The qualitative work was particularly enlightening and this comment from a member stands out: "This report is unique given its perspective on marketing. Marketing and advertising may be the last horizon — the last uncharted territory — for supplier diversity professionals. My hope is that the ANA broadly shares this with the marketing industry to increase understanding of the power of supplier diversity."
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