2024 Visibility Perceptions in Advertising

Introduction

GLAAD recently fielded a study of decision-makers and senior leaders in the Advertising Industry to understand perceptions, commitments, and feelings about the impact and importance of featuring the LGBTQ community in advertising and uncover new and emerging industry challenges.

This tracking study was first conducted in 2021 as part of the launch of The Visibility Project in partnership with P&G, exposing the myths and unveiling new facts about the industry’s commitment to LGBTQ inclusion in advertising. The Visibility Project started as a campaign to drive and sustain LGBTQ inclusion in advertising and marketing. It has now grown into a full-fledged consultancy, education, and research engine of GLAAD that provides needed tools, resources, and playbooks for more authentic inclusion that drives cultural change. This inaugural study revealed how crucial representation is in driving greater acceptance and understanding of LGBTQ people and issues, and it underlined essential insights that the industry lacks internal knowledge to get representation “right.”

This second wave of the study was conducted to pinpoint changes in sentiment and commitment from the industry compared to the first study. In an environment of unprecedented anti-LGBTQ legislation combined with a small but loud minority of extremists pushing back against LGBTQ inclusion efforts during Pride month, it was imperative to gauge where the industry is today with inclusion efforts.

In this report, we learn directly from industry leaders how (or even if) advertising budgets targeting the LGBTQ community have changed, whose stories and depictions the industry prioritizes within advertising, and how brands are responding to the backlash and challenges facing the industry today.

The study also identifies why the Advertising industry believes it’s important to advocate for the LGBTQ community, along with perceived barriers and risks. Finally, we learn what tools or resources the sector needs to remain committed to this culture-changing work. GLAAD’s research shows that media exposure drives familiarity and acceptance by double-digits, and advertisers have a responsibility and an opportunity to be part of the change we need to see to increase acceptance of the LGBTQ community.

More Publications from GLAAD

Transgender Day of Remembrance, which honors the memory of those murdered because of anti-transgender prejudice, is recognized annually on November 20. GLAAD encourages journalists to mark the occasion with stories about the pervasive problem of crimes against transgender people, as well as the diversity and resilience of the community in the face of harassment and violence.

Read More

Every year, the South Asian community comes together to celebrate Diwali, a massively popular worldwide event that has a rich complexity in belief and meaning. Also known as the “Festival of Lights,” it signals the New Year while for others, it represents a time for reflection and renewal.

Read More

On the morning of June 28, 1969, a group of patrons at the Stonewall Inn – a New York city bar that was a frequent target of police raids because it catered to the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community – fought back against police brutality and harassment. Their uprising set in motion a wave of activism among LGBT people that put the issue of LGBT civil rights on the American political map. This resource kit will help journalists cover the 40th anniversary of this momentous event in the history LGBT rights.

Read More

stay tuned!