Should You Speak About Controversial Topics?

Anyone following the news sees mounting divisions around the globe. Despite repeated calls for civility, issues like religion, race, and politics increasingly separate neighbors and families. It frequently gets ugly.

Do these issues have a place in commerce? If they do, and considering spreading tribalism, can you expand your business within your community without offending sales prospects who are “outsiders"?

For example, consider religion in America. Some say America’s a Christian nation, while others point to the First Amendment’s prohibition of establishing a religion. It’s a difficult debate to win.

Anecdotal evidence suggests that while there are many people of every faith who regularly attend religious services, the overwhelming majority do it for networking purposes. Considering the maxim that people do business with those they know, like and trust, the relationships forged in those pews can be incredibly lucrative.

But what of those with true faith who want to universally prosthelytize their beliefs? If they share philosophies with their clients, everything is fine…but what if their views are radically different?

To make such discussions even more precarious, Pew Research reports 11% of American adults don’t believe in or aren’t even sure about God’s existence. Few businesses can afford to offend 11% of their potential clientele, suggesting this is a topic best not discussed in public.

Should you discuss anything controversial?
From Black Lives Matter to trade policies, immigration to healthcare, coverage of fraught matters like abortion, violence, and sexual predatory behaviors is on the rise. Companies of every stripe are actually under pressure from a range of constituencies — employees, customers, investors, and the communities in which they operate — to take a public stand on these high-profile political and social movements.

The Edelman Trust Barometer has found 54% of employees globally believe that CEOs should speak publicly on controversial political and social issues they care about. 53% of consumers agree that every brand has a responsibility to get involved in at least one social issue that does not directly impact its business.

Which returns us to the question; can you take a visible position on these types of social issues without offending customers who disagree with you?

Limiting Your Scope
Nobody can (or should) speak out on every issue, so picking your battlefield matters. Obvious moral issues (i.e. genocide) demand a reaction, but others are less cut-and-dried. To decide whether your company and/or executives should speak out, ask a few questions before preparing and positioning any response.

1)     Do you want to speak out at all?

2)     Does your response to this issue align with the company’s strategy, mission, and values?

3)     How strong a position are you willing to take?

4)     If you’re not willing to take a strong position, should you even bother?

5)     Do you want to take the lead in driving the conversation?

6)     Are you okay standing solo on this issue, or will you be more influential partnering with (and potentially taking a back seat to) other organizations?

7)     Are you willing to invest the expertise and resources to meaningfully influence the issue?

8)     Will your constituencies agree with the stand you’re taking?

Furthermore, if the answer to this last point is “NO,” it’s critical to perform a risk assessment in advance to determine if taking a significant stand will hurt your position with customers, your largest investor, etc.

Starbucks Learns How To Speak Out
Assuming you conclude it’s to the company’s benefit to speak up, you have the opportunity to become a leader on the issue in question…if you handle it properly.

Consider Starbucks, which in 2018 partnered with USA Today in a campaign entitled “Race Together.” Launched in the wake of the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, Starbucks baristas were instructed to write “Race Together” on cups and engage customers in conversations about race. This initiative was broadly panned and generally seen as a marketing stunt, with customers responding that race wasn’t the issue and that a Starbucks store wasn’t the right venue to explain centuries of racism. Starbucks, which didn’t invest much of itself in the effort, quickly backed off.

Fast forward a few months, when a Starbucks store manager called the police after two Black men, denied access to the bathroom, refused to leave the store (resulting in their arrest). Protests and outrage online pushed Starbucks to apologize, issue a new bathroom policy, and shut down 8,000 company-owned stores in the US for an afternoon of anti-bias training. This training, guided by experts from the Equal Justice Initiative and the NAACP Legal Defense/Education Fund, was also shared with other companies.

Given that Starbucks’ mission is to be “a third-place environment, where everyone is welcome, and we can gather, as a community, to share great coffee and deepen human connection,” the fact this racist incident happened in a Starbucks store forced the company to speak out to ensure all customers would feel comfortable buying from them.

Their new anti-bias training, directed at 175,000 baristas, provided Starbucks a significant opportunity to influence how people of color are treated in retail stores across the board. The company demonstrated its commitment by shutting down all US stores for training.

And with customers and community members alike outraged by the incident, Starbucks quickly saw their key constituencies align with a desire to do something systemically different. Their commitment was universally recognized, creating a true “win-win” opportunity.

It’s Rarely A Simple Answer
Most companies typically find themselves torn over whether to speak out on major social topics, and need to do a careful cost/benefit analysis before taking a significant public stand. Assessing the company structure might also reveal a division, product, or brand where it’s appropriate to speak on the issue, while shielding the overall company. In this manner, the corporation can sidestep any controversy while still appearing supportive.

In such a situation, it might also be preferable to let others take the lead, joining a group or association addressing the issue. This allows your company to claim credit and know you’re participating, but helps deflect any potential blowback.

And should you determine it’s not in your best interests to speak out at present, continue monitoring the situation until such time, if any, that things evolve to a point where it behooves you to make your position known publicly.

Nobody Likes A Hypocrite
With each passing day, Internet resources and social media make it increasingly simple to determine whom you support and donate to. Public discord makes inevitable decisions to not work with one of “them.”

And if you’re willing to take a stand on an issue you feel strongly about, many will respect you to a point…even if they disagree with you. But what happens when you try to have it both ways? Consider, for example:

  • AT&T, whose corporate mission statement invokes gender equity and the empowerment of women as one of its core values. AT&T has also donated over $300,000 (albeit quietly) to legislators in Texas responsible for a new law outlawing abortion.

  • AT&T also pledged in early January to suspend donations to all Republican members of Congress objecting to certifying Joe Biden as US president. Their pledge, made after the January 6th insurrection effort to overthrow American democracy, was very public. However, one month later the company sent thousands of dollars through their political action committees to groups with ties to these same members of Congress.

  • Intel declared in January it would not contribute to these same Republican objectors. The company then donated $15,000 to the primary group raising contributions for Republican Congressional members, two-thirds of whom they’d just sworn to deny funding to.

  • Cigna, which said Jan. 13 it would discontinue support of any members of Congress that “hindered a peaceful transition of power,” sent $15,000 each to the two campaign committees raising money for Republican members of Congress.

Progressive customers of these companies, learning of the duplicity, invariably began searching for alternate suppliers.

It’s Called “Woke-washing”
When Lacoste announced it would swap its trademark crocodile logo for 10 limited-edition polo shirts, each featuring a different endangered species, they were quickly tripped up by the observation that the company was offering “gloves made from deer leather” and “cow leather handbags” online.

The rise in consumer awareness is increasing pushback from customers upset with food companies that can legally put “natural” on foods that aren’t. Word is spreading of companies that pick issues to “help”, even as they continue creating harm though unethical working conditions, racism, sexism, homophobia, or ablism.

Hence the rise of woke-washing, when a corporation, institution, or individual says or does something that signals their advocacy for a marginalized cause but also continues to cause harm to vulnerable communities.

As noted in The Guardian, “Woke-washing is when companies cynically prey on customers’ social awareness.” This new movement has caused negative reaction to questionable marketing ploys from Pepsi, Marks & Spencer, Burger King, Chevron, and countless others.

All are accused of appearing to adopt the concerns of marginalized groups while really doing little to help, or actually simultaneously causing harm. The Guardian questioned whether brands flashing their support for just causes may merely be preying on our collective conscience to lure consumer purchases in their direction.

It’s Not A Lost Cause
Please don’t misunderstand; we recognize that businesses are there to make money. Therefore, the pressure to support social causes without being hypocritical or upsetting significant constituencies is a balancing act of the highest caliber.

Some efforts will miss their mark, such as when Gillette launched an ad inspired by #MeToo’s challenge to toxic masculinity. Arguably, they still gained brand value by engendering a vociferous debate over the value of the messaging and, as a result, globally acquiring significant amounts of free media.

But the willingness to step forward should have wider benefits, such as when Nike brought in US football player (and civil rights activist) Colin Kaepernick to be the face of a marketing campaign. The move outraged then-president Donald Trump, who belittled the effort, bringing it significant attention, and later, an Emmy award.

There’s an argument to be made that if a company brings an issue to the public’s attention or increases mainstream support for the marginalized, then the ends justify the means. However, the high-wire act comes from profit-driven companies cynically cashing in on people’s idealism and using progressive-orientated marketing campaigns to deflect questions about their own ethical records. It was the wall Audi ran into from its 2017 Super Bowl ad, hailed for backing equal pay. Shortly thereafter it was revealed that just two out of the company’s 14 top executives were women.

What’s The Boss Doing?
With seemingly every company looking to support social causes, and competitors and social media laying in wait to trip them up, make sure your own house is in order before you start down this road. Choosing a cause that’s the right fit for your company’s philosophy, product lines, customer base, investors, reputation, markets served, etc. can be a tricky business.

Making it a bit more challenging may be if the company and/or top executives aren’t seen by the public as pulling their fair share. For example, a company supporting the homeless, but whose CEO is notorious for not paying taxes, is certain to be a public relations disaster. Equally, a firm responsible for major oil slicks touting itself as “green” probably won’t go over too well.

One Last Thing To Consider
Generation Alpha (kids born 2010-2024) are already unprecedented in the extent they're growing up online. The largest age cohort EVER, this generation is holding brands accountable for causes like social justice and sustainability. And they already stand out in their worldliness, brand awareness, and influence over household spending.

So if you want to support a cause, don’t just do it as something to make money. If you’re going to support a cause, make sure it’s because the cause is something you REALLY believe in.

Because whether you call it healthy, woke-washing, or hypocrisy, this trend is here for the long-term. Many younger people (legitimately) feel the economic system doesn’t work for them. Business appealing to their sense of idealism is a smart move.

After all is said and done, you can make this new strategy work for you if you truly believe in something. Only you’re going to have to work pretty hard to convince people you’re sincere.

With that said, I wish you a week of profitable marketing.

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This article originally appeared for Renaissance Executive Forums.