7 Ways Women Can Work Together to Move the Industry Forward

It's not a collaboration; it's a collision of ideas

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From music to fashion to startups, the word “collaboration” has become a part of the daily lexicon, with artists, designers and executives working together to create something bigger and better than what they could have created alone. But industry icon Charlotte Beers put an interesting spin on collaboration in a panel at the Girls’ Lounge at this year’s Cannes Lions Festival. According to Beers, collaboration is “an agreement to do nothing”; she much preferred the term “collision.”

“Collision” is defined as a violent strike of one thing against another. It inspires action and can spark a fire. Beers may be onto something: Maybe the newest ideas and best solutions aren’t bred from collaboration, but rather from collision.

In our industry, we’re colliding more than ever but there are ways that we can make these relationships even more dynamic.

Across agencies

I co-hosted a Dinner for Ladies through the WIE Network with WIE’s Dee Poku and fashion designer Rebecca Minkoff. The event was put on in partnership with Deloitte Digital, Havas and Berlin Cameron. It’s not often that you see multiple agencies coming together to discuss what’s “beyond the pledge” for #TimesUp. The future of our industry could be saved by moving everyone forward together instead of competing individually.

With each other

Maybe the newest ideas and best solutions aren’t bred from collaboration, but rather from collision.

The dinner wasn’t about where we worked, it was about people banding together, fostering connections and conspiring for actionable change in the process. You see this in full effect with organizations like The Female Quotient. Our keynote speaker at the dinner, Colleen DeCourcy, CCO at Wieden + Kennedy and member of the Time’s Up Advertising steering committee, said, “Make business decisions in favor of women. Be shameless. I think that’s part of living the change.”

Across industries

Find inspiration in programs like the CMO Growth Council at Cannes, where CMOs from 25 leading brands came together to discuss strategies for long-term growth. Another good example is Amazon and Huge’s “change for good” hackathon where the companies organized a competition to raise awareness for international issues while also creating a platform for teams to develop ideas on the ground that would become real products benefiting people around the world. This fosters teamwork on so many levels, but it’s especially admirable to see companies crossing the proverbial aisle to innovate in the name of social good.

With your team 

How we lead is changing, with millennials looking for a more open, authentic relationship with their boss instead of the traditional top-down management we’re accustomed to. It’s important to foster an open dialogue about everything from work to setting career goals to mental health, because our teams will be more productive and engaged if they feel like their voices matter.

Between mentors and mentees

The mentor-mentee relationship must be a two-way dialogue. This will lead to a lifetime partnership versus a one-way street of advice. Outside mentorship also goes beyond personal relationships and can strengthen the industry as a whole. In Cannes, Rebecca Minkoff noted, “You can find mentorship all over. Get to know someone in an industry that you know nothing about.”

With the younger generation

Gen Z is the first generation to feel that they have power right now. They aren’t waiting to rack up 20 to 30 years of management experience before they start enacting change. In fact, Girl Up and BAV’s new “Her Gen Z World” study found that 70 percent of survey respondents believe their lives need to make a difference in the world, so we should give them a seat at the table and a mic. We have to hear Gen Z’s voices and enable them to take action, considering we have as much to learn from them as they do from us.

Without putting dollars first

The most interesting sparks happen when two people are so inspired by one another that they just have to create something together and money is not the key driver. There are a beauty and peace that come from mutual uplifting. We talk about a human approach to the consumer, but we should also be taking that approach to clients. Give yourself the freedom to come up with a bold idea. Don’t worry about your stock price.

Collisions or collaborations, whichever word you gravitate toward most, are the most rewarding when we bring what makes us special and unique to the table. Partnerships that can produce the best results will be the most rewarding when we focus on our core strengths—what makes us special and unique—and partner together whenever we can for the best result. Rebecca Minkoff said it best: “Collaboration is always in fashion.” Let’s band together in the smartest, most effective ways possible to ensure that collaboration—or collision—aren’t passing fads.