Hello, industry. Can I pick your brain?

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Carmela Soares (1).jpgBy Carmela Soares, creative director, Isobar

We’re recruiting for a creative director and it’s a pretty sweet role. Lots of autonomy, running your own team, working with big Australian and global clients that get excited by fun, innovative work, in a big, global, award-winning agency. I’d apply on the spot if I didn’t already work here.

Last week we ran a job ad on LinkedIn, Facebook, and a few other sites. Result: over 150 applications in just a few days. But here’s the catch, only three women applied, and none of them based in Australia.

Before you jump straight to the comments and yell ‘FEMINIST’ at me (why, thank you), I’m not stating here that we’re specifically looking for a woman. We are looking to hire the best creative director in the country. And I can’t make an informed decision if the sample I’m choosing from is biased. I need to have a clear picture of the best talent out there, a group of candidates that represents our creative departments, our industry and – one can dream – our society.

The fact is, 0% of female CDs or senior creatives ready to step up applied to a great job. However, statistics estimate there are 11.5% of women running creative departments. While this number is still pretty ‘meh’, it was the least I was expecting to see.

While Kara, Stefanie, Amy, Annie, Tara and I might be happy with our jobs, I very much doubt that we’re the only female CDs in Australia, or that everyone else is not looking into changing jobs. So why are they not reaching out? I spent some time thinking about my own career and came up with a few possibilities.

1. They don’t think they can GET the job.

Several women in Australia do amazing creative work, but the industry suggests only men get the great gigs. Have you checked the Top CDs list on BestAds? Zilch girls. The feeling of not belonging can be overwhelming, and we don’t even bother applying.

2. Language bias undermines confidence.

Bossy, difficult, emotional, not funny. Every single woman in a leadership position has heard one of these clichés at least once, probably several times. Sometimes we almost believe it.

3. We’ve been rejected before for the weirdest reasons.

I once met with the CEO as a final formality for an agency ECD role. Despite four successful rounds of previous interviews, I didn’t get the job, and the official feedback was that the CEO wanted ‘more of a buddy.’ What does that even mean?

It’s no one’s fault this happens, but as an industry we need to call this out to encourage and motivate candidates with diverse gender, backgrounds and ethnicities to put themselves in the running. Because we’re not looking for a buddy, we’re looking for a shit hot CD.