Please, let鈥檚 end wokevertising
A view from Ravi Amaratunga Hitchcock

Please, let鈥檚 end wokevertising

Turning generational social movements into marketing trends isn鈥檛 just callous and at times offensive. It could have truly dangerous implications.

Enough is enough.

Let鈥檚 make a pledge to ourselves in 2021.

Let鈥檚 end 鈥渨okevertising鈥 once and for all.

Whisper it softly to yourself. Demand it on your Zoom calls. Hell, thrust open your windows and scream at the top of your lungs.

I don鈥檛 care how you do it, as long as you say:

I鈥橫 DONE.聽

NO MORE WOKEVERTISING IN 2021.

Jokes aside, I鈥檝e got a deadly serious point to make.聽

Turning generational social movements into marketing trends that can feature in campaigns isn鈥檛 just callous and at times offensive. Doing so could have truly dangerous implications.

I鈥檒l start by making a clarification.聽

When I say 鈥渨okevertising鈥 I鈥檓 not referring to 鈥渂rand purpose鈥.聽聽

The act of brands and corporations reflecting and looking deep within themselves to figure out how they can make long-term, meaningful contributions to the world around them 鈥 well that should be applauded.

鈥淲okevertising鈥 is the act of being seen to do the above in the only way some of us know how 鈥 through a punchy marketing campaign.

Think if you want an OG wokevertisement.

Solving the world's problems one social asset at a time.

Marketing can change the world!

Except no-one asked it to. No-one asked for brands to replace governments and for ad agencies to replace NGOs.聽

Nor do we necessarily have the deep expertise required to navigate these big complex questions. Especially when we鈥檙e trying to cram it all into 90 seconds.

Sadly the attempt to make hugely complex issues work in digestible marketing formats is clearly a trend in the ad industry. The assumption is that it will help us sell to ever more skeptical customers.

And perhaps this would work if only a handful of brands took this approach meaningfully.聽

Unfortunately even Kendall couldn鈥檛 stem the tide. Wokevertising, right now, is everywhere 鈥 from 鈥渄iverse鈥 one-dimensional casting, to grandiose manifestos. It鈥檚 in every YouTube pre roll. Every TV break. Every sponsored post. Every banner ad.

A barrage of:

鈥淏elieve in who you are鈥.

鈥淲e UnDeRsTaNd ThEsE aRe UnPrEsCeDeNtEd TiMeS鈥.

鈥淐hange is a long journey, and it starts today鈥.

Tell that to your six month old black square on Instagram.

But I think the levees have finally broken.

We have been flooded by so much wokevertising that of making a political statement as a brand is now anything but.

I honestly feel pure relief when I see a Cillit Bang ad that doesn鈥檛 try to talk about race and identity.

Our audiences are getting fed up with brands overreaching.聽

Just read the comments beneath Mini鈥檚 that condenses complex layered identity politics into a melee of five-second vignettes.

鈥淭his looks like an advertisement for 鈥楥entre of Equality鈥.鈥

鈥淚f you are going to make an advertisement for a car brand.... maybe SHOW THE CAR for more than 15% of the video.鈥

The thick fog of wokevertising has made us perhaps overestimate our role in society and forget our primary responsibilities commercially.

The box tick diversity that wokevertising leans on leaves the communities that are 鈥渃hampioned鈥 feeling short changed and used.

Often the people making the calls in these campaigns are not from those communities on screen鈥 which can be telling.

But worse still, wokevertising is leaving those interested in our products perplexed at best, and angered at worst.聽

Beats is another confusing culprit. On one hand it made a strong nuanced statement about in the aftermath of the George Floyd protests across the US.聽

Then it bizarrely translated this message into Flo Milli dancing in front of a confederate statue interlaced with abrasive product shots.

Sounded great in a deck, but as this reviewer says, it .

As leading industry voice Marvyn Harrison eloquently put it: 鈥淏rands becoming over familiar with a community group or protected characteristic and using it to shamelessly sell products is so unworkable.鈥

That鈥檚 the thing. You鈥檒l often find wokevertising campaigns don鈥檛 really have a creative idea.聽

They think wokeness is the idea. This is where the emperor's new clothes can finally be seen.

Woke as cultural context, as knowledge, as guardrails, as a consideration 鈥 that can be a powerful thing.

But when it suffocates a commercial message to render it all but useless, perhaps that can be dangerous.

This leads me to perhaps the scariest ramification of wokevertising as a whole.

Have we inflated the importance of being woke to a point where we have alienated many different segments of mainstream audiences?

And by ignoring them, will those audiences turn to other places? Will they respond to other types of route-one unprogressive advertising instead?聽

In a way this is the story of our time. The story of Brexit and Donald Trump.

You don鈥檛 need an to tell you that left-leaning liberal creative industries (which, I hold my hands up, I鈥檓 part of) have failed to connect with large swathes of the wider population.

A vacuum which the global alt-right have all too easily exploited again and again in the last decade.

In our little petri dish of marketing, wokevertising is no different. It too can be easily weaponised by those on the fringes of the alt-right movement.

It鈥檚 easy to use wokevertising as proof that the 鈥渨okerati鈥 have lost touch with the 鈥渁verage person鈥 with their 鈥渃ultural elitism鈥.

Proof for the haters that (the actually good intention of) giving underrepresented communities a platform is a waste of time.

Will wokevertising, if it continues at this rate, actually take us backwards to a type of advertising that鈥檚 undiverse? A polarization of extremely woke and unwoke communication to serve equally polarized populations?

Will our intentions of creating a more representative industry that makes more representative work be impossible to see through because we went too far with wokevertising?

Okay Ravi, so great. Easy to rip into wokevertising, well done.

But representation is important and people need to see themselves on screen.聽

We want to make change as a collective industry.

How are we meant to do that if we can鈥檛 wokevertise?

Good question. But the good news is it鈥檚 possible.

Here are just a few ways.

Firstly, find time to give over the mic if you need to tackle a certain demographic or issue. What is hard work (or just plain impossible) for certain agencies with traditional structures and cultures just comes naturally to others.

Kendrick Lemar and Dave Free鈥檚 鈥渟ervice company鈥 has created work with no 鈥減re-eminent woke message.鈥澛 Just beautifully crafted storytelling from a genuinely Black perspective. Pumped full of meaning and references without having to hammer it home. It is what it is. And it鈥檚 not just great. It stands out from the crowd so clearly. Simple stories, with more meaning the more you look at it.

A straight up commission where the creative team knows their audience inside out at all levels and doesn鈥檛 need to hide behind wokevertising to be confident in what they are saying.

I maintain no agency or brand committee could ever have come up with something that feels so effortlessly original in the current political climate.

Secondly, let鈥檚 stop trying to cram everything in 90 seconds. It seems bonkers to be having these conversations still in 2021, but complex topics need to be explored over time. Don鈥檛 rely on one campaign message. Look at a whole suite of different types of stories that approach difficult issues in a nuanced way. Maybe become more editorial, communicating 鈥渓ittle and often鈥 rather than bunging everything into two campaigns a year.

Another solution is to just not be woke at all. Sometimes people just want to . As long as you have the cultural intelligence to not be offensive, you don鈥檛 actually have to shove woke into every brief you write or receive. Instead you could re-focus back on really creative, unique ideas that cut through.

Not only would this just mix up what audiences are being served 鈥 giving you a chance of actually being listened to 鈥 but it also would allow (fewer!) powerful brand messages with purpose at their core to cut through.

Finally, and perhaps most obviously, look at yourselves before you think about your output, whether you鈥檙e a brand, agency or production company. As a PoC run business, I can tell you that when you hire truly representative staff for a campaign, you don鈥檛 really have to hide behind the veil of wokeness.聽 The fear of being 鈥渃ancelled鈥 is an awful starting point for creativity, but often the confidence in what you approach comes from your people first and foremost.聽

So as we move on in 2021, perhaps we will see the end of the wokevertising, and the start of something far, far more interesting.

Ravi Amaratunga Hitchcock is co-founder of Soursop

Topics