Join GLAAD and take action for acceptance.

    Advertising Visibility Index 2023

    Ensuring fair, accurate, inclusive and diverse visibility for LGBTQ people in marketing and advertising campaigns.

    GLAAD’s Advertising program works with brand and agency leaders to intentionally bring LGBTQ inclusivity and visibility into external campaigns and product development, backed up by internal policies that support LGBTQ employees, vendors, and stakeholders. Along with briefings, workshops, and consultancy with corporate partners, the program also measures the quality and quantity of LGBTQ inclusion in advertising.

    The inaugural GLAAD Advertising Visibility Index measures LGBTQ visibility in advertising and consumer perceptions of inclusion in partnership with Kantar, the world’s leading data, insights and consulting company. Released at Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity in 2023, the Index is the first of an annual report on the state of LGBTQ representation in advertising and marketing.

    Key Findings in the 2023 Advertising Visibility Index

    • LGBTQ People Are Nearly Invisible In Mainstream Advertising:
      • Of the 436 ads on national linear television from the top ten largest advertisers, LGBTQ people received 1.42% of screen time and are featured in only 3% of ads.
      • LGBTQ-inclusive ads were deemed insufficient in their representation.
    • Consumers support pro-LGBTQ brands
      • 66% of Americans feel advertisers have a responsibility to give visibility within their content for LGBTQ individuals, couples, and families.
      • Gen Z is nearly 1.5x more likely to say advertisers are not appropriately representing LGBTQ people.
    • Consumers are not recognizing inclusion in ads
      • 64% of consumers believe LGBTQ representation is explicit enough to be noticed by most people, however,
      • Less than 40% of consumers noticed LGBTQ representation in advertising in Super Bowl ads that were intended to be LGBTQ-inclusive.
    • Consumers place high importance on inclusive ads featuring universal empathy and realism, more than LGBTQ celebrities.
      • 54% of consumers say quality representation includes LGBTQ people in realistic stories and 54% say LGBTQ people with instances of empathy and humanity.
      • Only 31% of consumers say good representation is rooted in featuring a LGBTQ celebrity.
      • Nearly 80% (79%) of non-LGBTQ consumers and 88% of LGBTQ consumers agree brands should strive for multi-dimensional and human representation when including LGBTQ people in advertising or content.

    Methodology:
    GLAAD’s Advertising Visibility Index utilizes two distinct methodologies in the development of this report. The first was the development of GLAAD’s proprietary Advertising Index Rating to quantify and qualify LGBTQ inclusivity in advertising. The second was a large-scale consumer survey with 1,000 U.S. Adults 18+ in partnership with Kantar. You can find more detailed information on this report’s methodology here.

    Share this

    MEASURE THE MOVEMENT

    Your gift allows us to track the impact of our work, helping us better understand the state of acceptance and address the gaps with advocacy — like working with brand and agency leaders for more LGBTQ inclusion in advertising.

    Support Our Program

    Learn more about our partnership with P&G on The Visibility Project, a campaign to drive and sustain LGBTQ inclusion in advertising and marketing, harnessing the power to accelerate LGBTQ acceptance so business can be a true force for good. Join here.

    Press Release : 

    More Publications from GLAAD

    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

    GLAAD is encouraging journalists to include gay, bisexual and transgender fathers and their families, as well as straight dads that have LGBT children in media coverage of Father’s Day. This toolkit provides potential story ideas and suggestions on how make Father’s Day coverage more inclusive.

    Read More

    stay tuned!