HP’s CMO: Brands and agencies must publish their ‘scorecards’ to move diversity forwards

HP’s chief marketing and communications officer Antonio Lucio on the crisis of confidence in marketing, effective brand building, and why he is demanding agency partners put diversity at the heart of their businesses.

Of all of those that called out the organisers of the Consumer Electronics Show last month for picking an all-white, all male keynote speaker line-up, Antonio Lucio’s was arguably the most forthright intervention. HP’s chief marketing and communications officer said on Twitter: “All men should boycott @CES if women are not invited to speak! Insulting in this day and age. We must do better!!”

It was Lucio’s commitment to diversity and the desire to see measurable and meaningful change that inspired a decision just over a year ago for HP to insist its main agencies include more women and people of colour in positions of influence on its account.

Although there was no explicit consequence, the call for direct action appears to have focused the minds of its five main agency partners – Gyro, BBDO, Fred & Farid, FleishmanHillard, and Porter Novelli – when it comes to the representation of women. A year on Lucio’s targets for women – more than half (56%) of the account team must be women, while 47% must be in leadership roles – have been exceeded.

On minority representation, where agencies were left to set their own goals, there is still plenty of room for improvement. Two agencies – BBDO and Fred & Farid – get special mention from Lucio for “significant progress” ahead of their own expectations, but he describes the return from the others as “frankly disappointing”.

Diversity and inclusion, for us, is a business imperative more than anything else. We believe our teams should be representative of those we serve.

Antonio Lucio, HP

Despite variable results, it’s testament to Lucio’s influence that he is able to provoke change without publicly wielding a stick. It also helps that HP had its own house in order before making demands of others, publishing its own employee data before setting its agencies the challenge to change. In 2016 its marketing and communication department was 63% female.  Across HP, women accounted for 43% of all leadership roles and 55% of all employees. More than a quarter (26%) were ethnic minorities.

“Diversity and inclusion for us is a business imperative more than anything else. We believe that our teams should be representative of the communities we serve,” Lucio tells Marketing Week.

“We diversified our marketing team first – we published our numbers ahead of the challenge because we would have no grounding to ask them to do it if we had not done it ourselves. In fact, the reason I gave them 12 months is because it took us 12 months to get to where we were.”

READ MORE: HP calls on marketing industry to unite on diversity

Lucio is not alone in identifying the business and societal benefit of diverse teams but few have been so transparent in publishing demographic data, which he refers to as a ‘scorecard’. Does he wish others would follow suit and reveal their progress, or lack of?

“I only control what I can control. I am only responsible for the things I am responsible for. Yes, I would love for other people to do it, that’s why we did this and that’s why we published this. What I think is that the time has come for brands to publish their freaking scorecards.

“If we are a discipline that prides itself on science, the only way we are going to be able to establish the correlation between diverse teams and improved business and revenue performance is by having a quantitative base. It is time that clients and agencies all publish their scorecards. That, to me is the most fundamental and basic thing that we should do, and then begin to track it. Without the quantitative framework, we are not going to move this forward.”

Crisis of confidence

It’s difficult to imagine Lucio ever being equivocal. Whether on the topic of diversity or the state of marketing, he is unerring in his conviction. On the latter, he believes marketing is in a trough, caused by the concerns around digital expressed by CMO peers such as Unilever’s Keith Weed and P&G’s Marc Pritchard – viewability, transparency and fraud.

“There is definitely a crisis of confidence within the discipline and it is related to the radical transformation of the digital age. Some of us look at the bright side of it, which is more and better opportunities to connect with our customers. Others see it the other way, in the nature of having too many options to choose from. In a world that is moving faster than ever before, a world in which change, disruption and uncertainty are constant. That’s why I think this is happening.“

As cogent as he is in identifying the problem, he is also clear in presenting the solution – don’t forget the fundamentals of marketing. “The role of marketing is that we have to build brands that stand the test of time. That means building businesses that stand the test of time. We are business people first and our fundamental role is to identify revenue today and revenue tomorrow. That’s why we were created. That’s the reason I started in this practice. It has never been brands for the sake of brands, marketing for the sake of marketing or media for the sake of media.”

Lucio says without a quantitative framework, the diversity agenda will not move forward

Lucio joined HP in 2015 from Visa where he held a similar role. He cut his teeth at consumer goods firms including P&G and PepsiCo. Moving from organisations whose business success is dependent on the success of its marketing to HP, where marketing had control of just one of the four Ps, required a very different approach.

“The core of the company is the engineering group, so product is controlled by them. Then you have pricing, controlled by the product management office. Then you have the distribution, controlled by sales. And marketing is relegated to promotion. The brand is something that is built outside the business – it is something that you add onto the product, it is not synergistically built as one from the beginning.

“You have to get out of the marcoms chair so that you can begin to participate in decisions about product, pricing and distribution, and the key is having more and better customer understanding. If you’re not in the consumer goods world, the job is significantly harder. That is why it is so important to be business people first, that we own the customer and the consumer understanding – that gives you the ability to affect the totality of the customer journey – and then to be able to showcase with tools that you are able to drive the revenue line short-term, mid-term and long-term.”

Marketers must be business people first

If Lucio has a guiding principle for marketing success it is this need to be a “business person” first, both to achieve career success and to advance the influence of marketing in an organisation. Defining what the marketing function is, what success looks like and having meaningful measures to track return was a process he employed at Visa and is repeating at HP. Balancing the ability to “walk and chew gum at the same time” by demonstrating “the impact of your marketing today” as well as “the benefits of building a business for the long term” is key, he adds.

READ MORE: HP’s CMO – We must be business people first and marketers second

“As marketers we are in love with innovation. That is what the underlying reason for being of the function is all about – constant invention – no question about it. But again, if you fundamentally believe in the premise that you have to be a business person first and a marketing artisan second, then it’s all about building the business short-term and long-term. That means that you have to have a very strong voice at the decision making table.

“You have to have a strong point of view, which is, by the way, the customer point of view, when it comes to strategic planning. Marketing is not an order-taker at the end of a business process, it needs to be front and centre when you are deciding strategy, because at the end of the day the most important responsibility that we have is to become the voice of the customer in our organisations.”

Despite the long to-do list marketers have in order to recover from the “crisis of confidence” he believes they are suffering from, Lucio is chipper about the near-term future for marketers. The number of channels and the potential of data means “there is no better time to be a marketer than today”. And despite the ability to employ scientific rigour and reach people in so many ways, he says effective brand building will offer competitive edge.

“I believe that brands are more important than ever, because in this web of information and disinformation, the concept of a ‘lighthouse brand’ that Adam Morgan created many years ago is more important than ever before. I believe that because we are so surrounded by rationality and numbers and predictability of algorithm-based thinking, the heart will be more important than ever before. We are all craving that human connection and those brands that are able to do so, I think, are going to be the brands that stand the test of time.”

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