When Sport England launched a campaign 'This Girl Can' aimed at women some loved it. Some hated it. But what do comms people think? We asked a volleyballing head of comms.
by Emma Rodgers
A new Sport England campaign called ‘This girl can’ was launched last week. The campaign claims to be the first of its kind to feature all shapes, sizes and sporting abilities that sweat and jiggle as they exercise.
As Sport England sets out “It seeks to tell the real story of women who exercise and play sport by using images that are the complete opposite of the idealised and stylised images of women we are now used to seeing.”
When Dan asked me if I’d write a blog post on it, I was more than happy to. As a woman who has always exercised or played sport, I was keen to really have a think about what it meant to me both as a comms professional and as an individual who is far from the stick thin woman that is often portrayed doing sport in the media. I’d also watched the video, which has had over 6 million views online already, as it had been shared by many of my female friends on social media before I even knew it was part of a specific campaign. If you haven’t seen the advert yet, you can check it out here.
The insight behind Sport England introducing the campaign is that there are 2 million fewer women (aged 14 – 40) taking part in sport or exercising in the UK than men. That’s even though 75% of women surveyed by Sport England said that they wanted to exercise more. They asked why women were saying sport and exercise was not for them and found that one of the strongest themes was a fear of judgment. This included worries about being the wrong size, not skilled enough or not fit enough.
Through use of real women and straight talking phrases, the campaign aims to empower women and get them active.
Personally I’ve always loved sport, whether it was individual, team or group – swimming, dancing, hockey, horse riding, walking up hills, and more recently (well from aged 27) volleyball – which I then went on to play at national league level and 7 times out of 10 with men. It has got harder though as a mum with a full time job to find the time and energy to do what I did, say 15 years ago. For this reason I’m probably not the main target audience for the campaign yet the first time I saw it, I loved it. The soundtrack ‘Get your freak on’ by Missy Elliott, in my view makes you want to move. The accessible body shapes, the spread of ages of the women involved and the way those featured are just getting on and doing – individually, with friends, competitively or at their own pace is I think a positive way to show women – real women – embracing life, achieving and having fun.
The campaign doesn’t hold back in intending to encourage women to face head on their demons. ‘I jiggle, therefore I am’, "Sweating like a pig, feeling like a fox" and "I kick balls, deal with it" are among the straight talking lines used in the campaign. Their intention to prompt a change in attitudes and help boost women’s confidence.
If the intention of the campaign (of which to date we’ve only really seen the video for) was to raise awareness and prompt debate, then it’s already achieved what it needs to. Most of the news coverage seems to be positive. Listen to Radio 5 live here, read The Independent here and here and you can see support for what it’s aiming to achieve. Both ITV News and the Mirror as part of their coverage are asking people whether it has motivated them to do more exercise (which is a comms person’s dream in my opinion as it’s looking to measure the impact of seeing the video. It will no doubt make a really helpful contribution to evaluating the campaign).
But not everyone believes ‘This girl can’ is the right platform to promote women into sport and exercise. Search #Thisgirlcan on twitter and the next search option is #thisgirlcan patronising.
Jessica Francombe-Webb and Simone Fullagar (a lecturer in sport and education and professor of Sport respectively from University of Bath) have written that the campaign is more about sex than sport in their Guardian article citing two out of three of the reasons above.
In readiness for writing this blog I wanted to know what others thought. It wasn’t scientific in any way but I asked female friends and family and via a running group in a 24 hour period what they thought.
The two posts got 65 comments. There were common themes across all comments.
Most found it inspiring and felt it focused on being healthy.
Most welcomed that it covered all shapes and sizes.
All felt it reflected real women and the good part of exercising hard.
At least three friends welcomed the benefit for younger girls and that it was good to show their daughters women being strong and sweating to show this was a good thing and to set an example.
At least two mentioned about the fact that when girls approach puberty, it’s hard to keep them interested in sport and to move away from body image and to welcome the body in its natural form.
Three women said that it had actually made them exercise as a direct result.
It prompted further debate about being healthy, the fitspiration idea and how it would get people moving.
The majority agreed it is was beneficial compared to previous marketing for women and that it is positive that it shows women working physically hard and achieving.
I’d love to hear your comments and thoughts, tweet me at @emmarodgers or comment below but for now, the last word I’ll leave to Clare Balding, who is one of the women supporting ‘This girl can’.
No, @The_Real_JSP, I have not been paid to support the @ThisGirlCanUK campaign. I am supporting it because I believe in it. #thisgirlcan
— Clare Balding (@clarebalding) January 16, 2015
Emma Rodgers is strategic manager communications and marketing at Stoke-on-Trent City Council.