The Black Gay Dollar: Ignored and Overlooked
The Black Gay Dollar: Ignored and Overlooked By: Herndon L.
Davis http://herndondavis.com
Although a vast sleeping giant, amazingly the black gay
community has scarcely been acknowledged and rarely marketed to
as a lucrative market segment; at least not until now. As an
explosion of black gay themed books, magazines, movies and
television shows march onto the societal forefront, America's
black gay presence is beginning to make waves within the world
of advertising and beyond.
All Gays Are Not The Same
Far too often the estimated $610 billion U.S. gay/lesbian market
is tracked without significant regard to race or ethnicity while
vast assumptions are made that all gays are basically the same,
having similar interests and needs. Hence one of the major
challenges gay African Americans and other gays of color have,
not being recognized as a viable marketing niche.
So who's to blame, for such a vast oversight of gay people of
color? Are racists marketers really at fault? In actuality the
answer is a bit more complicated and two-fold in nature.
Ironically, this situation lies parallel to what exists today
within the mainstream community where there's a lack of ethnic
diversity and outreach to communities of color. Further, when
everyone sitting at the gay advertising decision table all look
the same, what usually occurs is more of the same type of gay
advertising and marketing directives.
"Strategic marketing to the gay community is still young, and
arguably less than ten years old. Segmenting a very hard to
reach population will take some time and expertise to map given
the tools available to market researchers" stresses Bob Witeck,
CEO of Witeck-Combs Communications, Inc., an advertising firm
specializing in the LGBT marketplace.
The Commercial Closet, a non-profit organization which seeks to
educate and influence corporate advertisers on LGBT inclusion
and stereotypes stated in an online commentary that "few
advertisers are yet at a point of being sophisticated enough
about the market to begin worrying about anything other than
medium-aged white men. Lesbians are widely left out of marketing
plans, let alone sub-demographics such as people of color,
youth, mature gays, couples, gay-parent families, and more."
Another reason for such a dearth of ethnic gay marketing is the
fact that gay minority populations are not nearly as open about
their sexual orientation as their white counterparts, hence
making it more difficult to track and market to them directly.
Earl D. Fowlkes, Jr, President/CEO of the International
Federation of Black Prides, agrees and compares it to the
"duality of race/ethnicity and sexual identify much like the
duality of being Black and American that W.E.B. DuBois wrote
about one hundred years ago in his book, "The Soul of Black
Folks". Often times we feel that we have to choose between being
either Black or LGBT just like many of us felt that we had to
choose to be Black or American. Only during the past few years
have many Black LGBT people realized that we can be both Black
and LGBT, and celebrate as well as acknowledge both which
explains part of the growth of Black Pride over the past ten
years."
Having to overcome racism and historical disadvantage is hard
enough, but to also self-identify as gay/lesbian carries with it
a double challenged existence, triple challenged if you count
gay women of color.
Witeck concurs, stating "anecdotally we see and understand that
self-labels are more problematic for many gay black males, and
prefer to avoid the identity as gay when seeking sexual
intimacy. The "down low" lifestyle certainly suggests there are
identity and community issues that African-Americans address
that many white people do not. However, closet behaviors are
certainly not isolated to any population or race."
The 2005 HIM (Hyperion Interactive Media) guide, which tracks
the gay/lesbian marketplace confirms the difficulty of
self-identifying as a gay person of color stating that "the mix
of family pressure, machismo, and other cultural influences each
have played their role in keeping these groups more tightly in
the closet..." Hence, the face and voice of gay activism seen
and heard most often on the evening news is almost exclusively
that of gay white men who ironically still experience "white
privilege" despite their challenged status as gay. Often to be
gay and white still brings with it a level of access that gay
ethnic minorities have never experienced.
Find a Way or Create One
Ironically, the lack of advertising/marketing attention towards
the black gay/lesbian community and other gay communities of
color has in several ways helped to bolster their own abilities
to serve themselves.
Back during the days of racial segregation when Jim Crow laws
kept black people out of many public establishments, black
communities across the country were forced to ban together in
order to create their own economic centers. The more racially
segregated the city, the more vibrant the black economic
community, hence the creation of thriving black city districts
such as Wall Street of Oklahoma City and the bustling corridor
of Atlanta's Auburn Avenue.
In an eerily parallel fashion, the same thing has now occurred
within the black gay/lesbian community and in other gay
communities of color who feel shut out by their white gay
counterpart initiatives.
As a result, this has given birth and rise to numerous black gay
themed books, magazines, movies and television shows that now
proliferate the internet other venues across the country.
Publications such as Clikque Magazine, TV show 's such as Noah's
Arc, and movies such as Brother to Brother, and Ski Trip, and
the thousands of black gay/lesbian themed books published over
several years now appear through word searches on Amazon.com,
Barnes and Nobles, and Yahoo search engines websites.
These dramatic facts definitely reflect a community of consumers
of black gay themed products and services. In fact savvy black
gay entrepreneurs already realize this and are standing to fill
in the gap.
>From the black gay owned B&B, The Bates House in Oakland, to the
black gay focused Matais bookstore in Long Beach, CA, to
Atlanta's black gay/lesbian focused business networking
organization, Affair With Flair, and several black gay travel
companies which provide excursions from exotic cruises to
backpacking adventures; the black gay community has managed to
quietly thrive under the advertising radar of Madison Avenue.
"We are a huge community with great spending power", states
Dwight Powell, editor of the glossy, nationally distributed,
Clikque Magazine. Powell adds that "all year long I come in
contact with tens of thousands of people at various events.
These are people with great jobs, education and healthy
relationships. These are people that own houses and purchase
expensive cars. They are frequent travelers, extremely concerned
about grooming and fashion, and are avid fans of music. This is
an untapped market that much be included in marketing plans."
In fact probably the most visible signs of a thriving black gay
economic community is the over 30-city Black gay pride circuit
which occurs every year in large and mid-sized cities across the
country and Canada. Entire weekends and partial weeks are filled
with completely black gay focused events from literary salons,
empowerment workshops, film screenings, and social gatherings at
night clubs, restaurants and in private homes.
According to Fowlkes, of the International Federation of Black
Prides, in 2004 alone, "175,000 people attended 30 Black Prides
events in the US and Toronto. Atlanta and DC had the largest
prides with 35,000 and 25,000 attendees respectively" and the
number is estimated to have increased dramatically in 2005. But
despite the impressive numbers, getting advertisers/sponsors on
board is still a major challenge. Fowlkes explains that "I was
usually shuttled between the LGBT marketing person - who was
usually a white gay man or the Black community marketing person
- who usually heterosexual when I used to solicit sponsorship
from companies for DC Black Pride.
One would think an event that brings 25,000+ people into a city
would be an easy sell. No way! The LGBT person would tell me
that they give money to the "other" pride event despite the fact
that most of the attendees of the Black Prides do not
participate in the "regular" pride events. They would send me to
the Black community marketing person where I would have to
explain the event over and over as well as deal with their
homophobia. Sometimes they got it and sometimes they didn't."
Surprising Trends
In a ground breaking study released in October 2004 by the
National Lesbian Gay Task Force, titled "Black Same-Sex
Households in the United States: A Report from the 2000 Census,
researchers found that black lesbian couples are raising
children at almost the same rate as black married couples, and
that black same-gender couples in general are raising children
at twice the rate of white same-gender couples although Black
same-sex households represent 14% of all same-gender couples in
the US.
The Future
As more gay/lesbian African-Americans come out the closet and
begin to publicly self-identify as gay, the face and voice of
the gay dollar will soon begin to transform. Therein lies the
distinct possibility of black gays not only being consumers of
gay focused products and services but instead becoming leaders
of the direction of gay focused products and services.
Just as white suburban youth now make up substantial sales of
hip-hop music in an arena dominated by black faces and voices,
the same potential lies for black gay artists in music, fashion,
and entertainment within America's gay/lesbian circles.
As we enter into 2006, the possibilities of the potential power
of the black gay dollar appear to just now be awakening and
emerging into a new day of opportunity for a previously
invisible and untrackable community.
Herndon L. Davis is an author, lecturer, and TV Host of
America's First Black Gay TV Talk show.. He can be reached
directly at http://herndondavis.com