With every role, our recruiters must be deliberate and thoughtful in the way we search, asking, ‘have I done a deep enough dive?’ As recruiters, if we’re not proactive and consciously looking for a more rounded candidate pool, we find referrals and external partners bring in a pool of talent reflecting the current market place, which means at present we’re likely to bring in more of the same.
In this role, we’re always under business pressure on to fill new hires, but looking for diverse talent takes time and resource; our business understands and, even better than that, champions this. Having senior leadership support is critical to turning the dial. Our UK chief executive Mike Islip champions this mandate, so as an agency we must walk the talk.
For example, recently we were looking for senior creatives. To fulfil our search for the best, as well as our commitment to diversity, we looked proactively for women. We created a map of around 30 women in London, about 13 per cent of our applicants.
In our present database, from a talent list of about 1,000 creatives, approximately 20 per cent are women. At DigitasLBi, one third of our current creative directors are women; Helen Fuchs is our executive creative director.
When you ask for talent internally, I’m conscious ‘like hires like’; people recommend their own network. That’s why we’re socialising roles through the Publicis Groupe Viva Women network, so women put forward peers from their social group.
We make sure women are on the interview panels; it means women feel at ease when they’re being interviewed, and creative work is seen through both a male and female lens.
If I could change one thing...
Often recruiters start with a Google search so I’d like to see candidates better tag their folios and CVs so they come top of the search. Female creatives, tag your folios with ‘award-winning’, ‘top creative director’ and ‘female creative director’ so you can be easily found. Recruiters need to work harder to ‘see’ and candidates need to work harder to be ‘seen’. Also, because female creatives are often put on ‘female centric’ brands and/or may have a gap due to taking time out of the external workplace to raise families, it would be great to have examples of ‘speculative work’ showcasing what they would have done with a ‘non-female’ brief. Candidates often get dropped for not having breadth of work or work gaps, so be proactive in addressing this.
So, does recruitment fail female creatives?
Not on Creative Equals’ watch. We are challenging recruiters to sign up to our five-point charter for change – simple actions that together will drive the single biggest change agencies, clients and creatives need to see.
- Written by Ali Hanan, 28th July 2016, The Drum
http://www.thedrum.com/news/2016/07/28/does-recruitment-fail-female-creatives-adland-recruiters-share-how-they-hire-diverse