Shea Moisture recently released an ad spotlighting caucasian women using their products and a mixed girl. This commercial sparked a lot of controversy because Shea Moisture’s products are the forefront of the African American women’s natural hair care community. The timing couldn’t have been worse because this comes just after Kendall Jenner and Pepsi faced controversy because the minority community felt that Pepsi made protesting look like a fun thing and put a white woman at the center of what is a national struggle now. It’s kind of the same premise. Black people felt like Shea Moisture wanted to use white women at the center of the ad to make it look more attractive when in fact, Shea Moisture’s audience is a black majority.
Shea Moisture came out and apologized for the ad and said they were just trying to expand their brand, but there were a few things they could have done differently. Maybe if they had split the main characters in the ad between black and white women and actually used black women with thick course hair, that isn’t commercialized most of the time, they might have been in the clear. After these two incidents, brands and their marketing are probably paying really close attention to what they put out and even the social media specialists are being edited with a fine tooth comb. So we just have to wait and see if another company falls into this marketing nightmare.
#SheaMoisture #Business Shea Moisture apologizes after everyone slammed its ad: 'We really f-ed… https://t.co/t2cpCr6Rn1 @mashable #news
— Emilio Cogliani (@Emils72) April 25, 2017
Who ever came up with the idea that caucasian women should be in a AD for Afro Centered product needs to be fired immediately #SheaMoisture
— TwittiBird (@edwardx71) April 25, 2017
Damn @SheaMoisture you didnt have to waste ad space to tell Black women you dont believe in our buying power. @ us next time. #sheamoisture
— Optimus Fine (@sunnydaejones) April 24, 2017
You know #SheaMoisture hit rock bottom after that ad when their whole collection end up at Marshals & on clearance😂#blacktwitterispowerful pic.twitter.com/Gykc35xmB1
— MyahAnikae 🌮 (@MyahAnikae) April 27, 2017
After that ad #SheaMoisture pic.twitter.com/6cvSoMtyMC
— AKA_eg0centric (@AKAeg0centric) April 26, 2017
I honestly think people are over reacting to the #sheamoisture ad 🙃
— HoneyBee (@coatedwhitRed) April 25, 2017