Post by account_disabled on Oct 17, 2023 0:33:05 GMT -5
Once, inclusive language was thought to be a luxury for businesses and their communications. Today, it’s essential. And going forward, it’s professional malpractice if marketers aren’t being intentional about inclusive language and urging their internal and external communications colleagues to do it as well.
If your brand and its marketing don’t convey a sense of inclusivity by respecting and reflecting a broad range of perspectives and identities, it may not have a place in tomorrow’s business world. Consumers (and employees) have more voice – and more choice – than they’ve ever had. Data consistently tells us that those audiences expect marketing and engagement to be more inclusive and representative.Building a diverse and inclusive culture is an utmost priority for every company and marketing department today. That’s why I jumped at the opportunity to serve as the instructor for a new LinkedIn Learning course, Diversity and Inclusion in Marketing: Inclusive Language for Marketers.
Here’s why the contents of the course are so important Phone Number List at this moment in time.Representation Matters in MarketingOne of the greatest mistakes marketers make is turning on their open for business sign and not putting out the welcome mat. For diverse audiences, if we don’t see ourselves and our culture reflected in the images and language in your marketing, we don’t know if your brand wants us around.Why is this more important than ever? Two simple words: demographic trends. Emerging generations are the most diverse in American history, across a wide range of identity traits — race, ethnicity, religion, gender and sexual orientation. Orienting your marketing language toward the same narrow audience runs the risk of shrinking your total audience over time, and excluding a sizable swath of potential customers. Here’s why that mistake is professional malpractice.If you feel like certain words, phrases, or references are now frowned upon that were not 10 years ago — you’re right. Society and our understanding and use of language is constantly evolving. Inclusion in culture and language requires EXTRA EFFORT, and mistakes will be made in our attempts to get it right. The goal is to make fewer mistakes and to catch as many as possible before they hurt people and your brand reputation. And when they do happen, we learn from them and build enough rigor to never make the same one twice.
In our learning course, I share a number of specific examples of common non-inclusive terms along with recommended alternatives. This can help provide some nuance and direction to guide your team. But as we explain, the most crucial thing is to listen to your stakeholders — customers, employees, business partners, etc. — to recognize how language impacts them and establish your own best practices.
Understanding core concepts like hidden bias, invisible forms of discrimination, and the distinct nuance of diversity within diversity will be helpful as your organizations charts a path forward toward an inclusive future.
Our new LinkedIn Learning course covers all of this and much more. I hope you’ll join me and we can play a small part in supporting your journey.
If your brand and its marketing don’t convey a sense of inclusivity by respecting and reflecting a broad range of perspectives and identities, it may not have a place in tomorrow’s business world. Consumers (and employees) have more voice – and more choice – than they’ve ever had. Data consistently tells us that those audiences expect marketing and engagement to be more inclusive and representative.Building a diverse and inclusive culture is an utmost priority for every company and marketing department today. That’s why I jumped at the opportunity to serve as the instructor for a new LinkedIn Learning course, Diversity and Inclusion in Marketing: Inclusive Language for Marketers.
Here’s why the contents of the course are so important Phone Number List at this moment in time.Representation Matters in MarketingOne of the greatest mistakes marketers make is turning on their open for business sign and not putting out the welcome mat. For diverse audiences, if we don’t see ourselves and our culture reflected in the images and language in your marketing, we don’t know if your brand wants us around.Why is this more important than ever? Two simple words: demographic trends. Emerging generations are the most diverse in American history, across a wide range of identity traits — race, ethnicity, religion, gender and sexual orientation. Orienting your marketing language toward the same narrow audience runs the risk of shrinking your total audience over time, and excluding a sizable swath of potential customers. Here’s why that mistake is professional malpractice.If you feel like certain words, phrases, or references are now frowned upon that were not 10 years ago — you’re right. Society and our understanding and use of language is constantly evolving. Inclusion in culture and language requires EXTRA EFFORT, and mistakes will be made in our attempts to get it right. The goal is to make fewer mistakes and to catch as many as possible before they hurt people and your brand reputation. And when they do happen, we learn from them and build enough rigor to never make the same one twice.
In our learning course, I share a number of specific examples of common non-inclusive terms along with recommended alternatives. This can help provide some nuance and direction to guide your team. But as we explain, the most crucial thing is to listen to your stakeholders — customers, employees, business partners, etc. — to recognize how language impacts them and establish your own best practices.
Understanding core concepts like hidden bias, invisible forms of discrimination, and the distinct nuance of diversity within diversity will be helpful as your organizations charts a path forward toward an inclusive future.
Our new LinkedIn Learning course covers all of this and much more. I hope you’ll join me and we can play a small part in supporting your journey.