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Free The Bid: a historical pledge to give female directors a voice In advertising

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LOS ANGELES – FREE THE BID is an Initiative guaranteeing women directors an equal opportunity to bid on commercial jobs in the advertising world.

Alma Har’el, director of the award-winning documentaries Bombay Beach and LoveTrue and Founder of Free the Bid, was inspired to ignite change when giving a recent interview to Mashable about the low number of female-helmed commercials. Less than 7% of directors are women, and less than 3% of creative directors at ad agencies are women. These numbers are hard to swallow for 50% of the world’s population, especially when the Harvard business review and many publications suggest that women are the #1 consumer group that makes approximately 85% of product purchase decisions.

PJ Pereira, CCO and co-founder of Pereira & O’Dell, had worked with Har’el when she directed two national campaigns for Airbnb. Pereira reached out to Har’el after her Mashable interview to express how much her words inspired him, and tell her his declaration to pursue a mandatory bid from a woman director on every pitch at his agency, as a result of reading the interview.

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Pereira said – “It’s a simple idea that will help the entire advertising ecosystem be more open to women directors. Because it’s right but also because it’s smart. A more diverse industry means a more creative one and a better representation of their customers and of society itself.”

Har’el was moved by the gesture and decided to use the idea to inspire ad agencies, production companies and brands to take the pledge for a woman director bid on every commercial.

Har’el named the initiative #FreeTheBid and launches it with an extensive website, and the backing of the most prominent industry figures at the epicenter of the gender diversity discussion, including renowned feminist and advertising consultant Cindy Gallop.

Har’el says, “I’m starting #FreeTheBid so the ad industry can come together after years of gender bias and take an affirmative step towards addressing what stops advertisers from working with women directors. I couldn’t have been an independent filmmaker and make the films I love if I didn’t make a living directing commercials. I want to make sure other women filmmakers have the same chance to sustain themselves while being creative and shaping the way women are represented in advertising. We have to start the change right now in the only practical and effective way – Let women be heard.”

Prior to its official launch, several of the world’s leading advertising agencies have already pledged to #FreeTheBid; FCB Global, DBB North America, BBDO Global, McCann NY, J. Walter Thompson, Leo Burnett, Pereira&O’Dell, Mother, Joan, Phenomenon and 180LA – all committed to get a woman bid on every job!

But what seems to be a real moment in the history of the advertising world is the commitment that brands are taking to actively increase the opportunities for women directors. Microsoft’s director of global advertising, Kathleen Hall and the world’s online marketplace eBay had already taken the pledge to #FreeTheBid.

eBay’s Chief Marketing Officer of North America, Suzy Deering says – “The #FreeTheBid pledge to extend to women meaningful opportunities in our business is a simple and powerful idea. In the advertising industry, addressing diversity is critical to continued growth and success, and at eBay we’re committed to aligning all aspects of our work with our inclusion initiatives.”

Nestle Water North America and Coca Cola also support the initiative. Rodolfo Echeverria, Coca Cola’s Vice President Creative of connections says, “Loved the idea and hope every agency in the world makes the pledge to #FreeTheBid so we can solve this problem quickly.”

On the website’s main page you can also see quotes from supporters such as renowned feminist and advertising consultant Cindy Gallop, alongside Spike Jonze who is famous for his astounding commercials as much as his award winning films. Jonze says – “I find #FreeTheBid so inspiring. It seems like a no brainer. Of course we should be getting more women filmmakers to bid on jobs. As with all great ideas, its such a simple one and the end result is going to be getting more diverse voices into the conversation and therefore more diverse voices into the work which makes the work better.”

Har’el, who was always a fan of Spike Jonze’s ability to keep his own voice as a filmmaker while directing unforgettable commercials, reached out to him as a male example to what inspired her to direct commercials her self. After long conversations with women directors and leading ad agencies, Har’el gathered what she believes are easy solutions to some of the problems that keep agencies from finding the right women for the job.

The #FreeTheBid website will feature over 130 signed women directors from all leading production companies including links to their reels and producers. It will curate new unsigned directors on a monthly basis and will keep track of the work that’s being done by women as a result of the initiative. Organized screenings for ad agencies who want to discover female directors and a system that will allow to track some of the numbers are also in the works, as well as events to showcase the work created from Free The Bid’s success stories.

The database is a critical resource because it will help the pledged agencies keep their com- mitment. A few years ago, a similar initiative was launched at the Swedish advertising market called ‘One Out Of Three’. It was a recommendation in a regulatory document and although it launched an important conversation, it didn’t manage to create a profound impact because agencies were struggling to find women directors. This resource is just a facilitator, however. The real change will happen inside of the agencies. “There are incredibly capable and talented women on the site, but we all know that without the commitment from ad agencies and brands, this would have been just another database of women who deserve a chance. My wish is that the agencies will be able to report positive results and see a real change in numbers a year from now.” – said Har’el.

Susan Credle, Global CCO of FCB, who was one of the first to join the Initiative and helped Har’el reach some of the more prominent agencies says – “To find great female directors, first, you have to look for them. It’s that simple. #FreeTheBid reminds us all to open our eyes to the less obvious but perhaps even more brilliant choice.”

Sasha Markova, creative director of advertising agency Mother adds – “A new language of storytelling is here. It’s wild, emotional, funny and so connected to the truth. Not earnest, polished truth. Raw, clumsy truth. The tellers of this story aren’t going to come from the old system. We need different, brave voices.”

Margo Mars, B-Reel Films MD commented “I’m thrilled to be working with Alma who is a director of powerful creative work with a strong and original voice. Her unique aesthetic, making her one of the new cinematic visionaries. The sooner we level the playing field, the sooner we can start categorising all directors by talent instead of gender! So much positive effort has gone into this, it will work, and when it does, it will permeate wider culture. That’s so exciting, we’re so IN!”

For all inquiries – info@FreeTheBid.com

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