Help

BI’s Article search uses Boolean search capabilities. If you are not familiar with these principles, here are some quick tips.

To search specifically for more than one word, put the search term in quotation marks. For example, “workers compensation”. This will limit your search to that combination of words.

To search for a combination of terms, use quotations and the & symbol. For example, “hurricane” & “loss”.

Login Register Subscribe

Saatchi boss quits over sexist remarks

Reprints

(Reuters) — Kevin Roberts, the chairman of Saatchi & Saatchi, quit after sparking uproar by saying a lack of women in high-powered jobs in advertising was not a problem and that some women lacked the "vertical ambition" to make it to the top.

"'Fail Fast, Fix Fast, Learn Fast' is a leadership maxim I advocate," Roberts said in a statement after he stepped down from the Publicis-owned agency.

"I failed exceptionally fast," said Mr. Roberts, a British-born advertising boss who spent more than four decades telling some of the world's biggest companies how to pitch their products.

But Mr. Roberts, born in 1949, veered dramatically off message when he was quoted in an interview with Business Insider as saying that he doesn't spend any time on gender issues as the gender diversity debate was over in the advertising world.

Publicis, one of the big four global ad groups, suspended Mr. Roberts on Monday, saying it did not tolerate "anyone speaking for our organization who does not value the importance of inclusion".

Mr. Roberts said he was sorry for the upset and offence his comments had caused.

"I have inadvertently embarrassed Saatchi & Saatchi and Publicis Groupe, two companies I love and have been devoted to for almost 20 years," he said on Wednesday.

The row which cost Mr. Roberts his job at Saatchi & Saatchi comes days after Roger Ailes resigned as chairman and chief executive of Fox News Channel following allegations of sexual harassment.

Circular ambition

In an interview with the Business Insider website, Mr. Roberts said some women at key junctures in their careers did not want to lead businesses and people, and that managers should reflect on how to deal with the ambitions of female and male employees who "simply want to be happy and do great work".

In the interview, Mr. Roberts appeared to argue that "idiotic dinosaur-like men" were trying to make women conform to Darwinian urges to acquire wealth, power, and fame.

"Their ambition is not a vertical ambition, it's this intrinsic, circular ambition to be happy," Mr. Roberts was quoted as saying.

The interview caused consternation in Saatchi & Saatchi and the wider group, its chief creative officer Kate Stanners said, while provoking a storm of criticism on social media.

The agency's worldwide CEO also said Mr. Roberts' views did not reflect the position of the agency, which he said was a meritocracy.

Publicis Groupe has a roughly 50-50 gender split amongst all its staff, while around 65% of Saatchi & Saatchi's staff are female, as the agency wants to reflect the buyers of the types of products it is advertising, Mr. Roberts told Business Insider.

Mr. Roberts, who started his career at London fashion house Mary Quant before working for Gillette, Procter & Gamble and Pepsi, said he would bring forward his retirement to Sept. 1 from May next year.

He said there was a "lot of learning to reflect on" in the debate sparked by his comments.

"Within the thousands of tweets, comments and articles there are many powerful and passionate contributions on the changing nature of the workplace, the work we do, what success really looks like, and what companies must do to provide women and men the optimal frameworks in which to flourish," he said.

Read Next

  • Prosecutor seeks France Telecom trial over wave of suicides

    (Reuters) — Paris prosecutors want France Telecom S.A., the former monopoly now known as Orange S.A., and its former boss Didier Lombard to go on trial for psychological harassment in connection with a wave of staff suicides in 2008-2009, sources said on Thursday.