“It takes work to become an evolved person.” – eToro CEO Lule Demmissie in her revelatory, authentic, moving speech from last night’s INvolve People Gala.
Last year I had one of the honors of my life being named to INvolve – The Inclusion People’s OutStanding LGBTQIA+ Executives list. And last night we celebrated. To say it was an iconic evening would be an understatement. (The TIME 100 were being feted in the same building, and I learned too late that my beloved Kylie Minogue was just a few floors down. That is probably for the best! For her sake. Lol.)
Thank you to INvolve CEO Suki Sandhu OBE for all he has done to create genuine inclusion in this world. His leadership is exemplary. And our gratitude to Deutsche Bank and fellow honoree Jon Tilli for being such gracious and generous hosts. Emcee Peppermint knocked it out of the park, and her fireside chat with fashion designer and “Real Housewives of New York” Jenna Lyons was truly inspiring.
I met some incredible new pals, and feel honored to have been among their presence: fellow Michigander Dow’s Trevor Ewers, another fellow Michigander Luminar Technologies’ Steven Del Gaizo, Verizon’s Kimmah Dozier (she/her), Komatsu’s Iris Wilson-Farley, eToro’s Lule D., Butterfield Group’s Karim Chowdhury MSc Chartered FCSI, EY’s Najiyah Chowdhury ACA, SafePlace International’s Maggie Lower 🏳️🌈 and Rachael LeClear, INFEMNITY Productions LLC’s Nina Kennedy, and Trans Formative Schools’ Alaina Daniels, and so many others whose names will occur to me, no doubt, throughout the rest of the weekend. Lol.
Thank you to Clark Hill and my amazing and kind colleagues Susan Ahern , Linda Watson , and Kathleen Sullivan for their support of my personal leadership journey as well as everything they do to champion inclusion at our wonderful firm. Thank you also to newsPRos’ Jaime Baum for her support in this recognition, and for the joy she brings every day to this work. Thank you to beautiful pal Maria Fracassa Dwyer for the fashion advice, and Amazon for supplying my couture. 😅🌈 ✨
Regan Robinson and Roy Sexton, Director of Marketing at Clark Hill (ME!), delve into how his background in theater equips him with what’s needed to be future ready, and why his diverse passions provide a rich framework for seeing its possibilities. They explore the misconceptions about authenticity (which inherently promotes a long-term perspective), and how authentic leadership must be nurtured by creating a safe space for expression and learning from mistakes.
Roy Sexton leads Clark Hill’s marketing, branding and communications efforts in collaboration with the firm’s exceptional team of marketing and business development professionals. He has over 25 years of experience in marketing, communications, business development and strategic planning.
Roy is passionate about problem solving, facilitating business growth, crafting communications strategy and enhancing law firm culture. He works closely with the marketing team to advance the firm’s digital and social media presence and external engagement, using multi-channel distribution and data collection. This enables the team to quantify results and use those results to produce thoughtfully and strategically organized content for clients and prospects.
Roy was named one of INvolve People’s 2023 Top 100 OUTstanding LGBTQ+ Executives internationally. He was listed in Crain’s Detroit“Notable LGBTQ in Business” in 2021 and “Notable Leaders in Marketing” in 2023, and he was aMichigan Lawyers Weekly “Unsung Legal Hero” (2018).
In 2022, Clark Hill’s marketing campaign, which Sexton played a key role in developing, received the Best Marketing Campaign award from the Managing Partners’ Forum in London, celebrating professional services organizations. The campaign was noted for its focus on values, diversity and inclusion. The Clark Hill marketing and business development team was also awarded “Best Marketing Initiative” by Managing Partners’ Forum in 2020.
Roy is a published author of two books: Reel Roy Reviews, Volumes 1 and 2 and he was named “Best Actor in a Musical” by BroadwayWorld Detroit in 2017 for his performance as Jasper in The Mystery of Edwin Drood at Ann Arbor Civic. Roy hosts the monthly Expert Webcast series All the World’s YOUR Stage: Authentic Culture Drives Authentic Growth.
About Future Fit™ with Regan Robinson
Future Fit™ unravels the secrets of how the world’s most innovative leaders stay future-ready in a fast-paced world. Hosted by futurist and strategist Regan Robinson, each episode explores how trailblazing executives turn uncertainty into their strategic advantage. Gain powerful insights and practical approaches as these visionary minds share the unconventional and imaginative ways they thrive today while leading their teams into tomorrow.
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About Regan Robinson
Regan Robinson is a holistic futurist and business strategist that empowers visionary companies to turn uncertainty into advantage and effortlessly innovate and strategize for their future. Over the course of 20+ years, she has helped some of the world’s most influential brands and companies strategize and grow. Regan has spearheaded revenue increases of 300%+, led as an executive at 3 start-ups and established business models, new capabilities, infrastructure and roadmaps for companies like VICE Media and Edelman Digital.
Thank you, David Ackert and Kevin Martin, for this opportunity to reflect on our amazing Legal Marketing Association – LMA International community and on 2023…
In this episode of The Market Leaders Podcast, join host David Ackert and special guest Roy Sexton, Director of Marketing at Clark Hill Law, for a conversation that looks back at the industry trends that defined 2023, Roy’s tenure as the President of the Legal Marketing Association, and where the legal marketing industry is heading in 2024 and beyond.
Tune in to hear about:
•Building community and collaboration in and after the pandemic
•Reflections on organizational impact and personal growth
•Exploring unique expression and authenticity in relationships
•Managing challenges and building unity in a diverse community
•The importance of data and accountability in organizational management
Finally got a chance to listen! (Yes, I know I should be asleep … but I’m still wired from seeing fab musical film Mean Girls tonight!) Thank you, David and Kevin for this therapeutic gift. Means a lot to have this kind of reflective moment and to share it broadly. My mom and I were dissectors after the fact (plays, movies, events … card games 😅), so this dialogue had a comforting, yes, healing familiarity. So thank you.
Thank you also to those who had an important impact on me this past year and beyond. I didn’t get to mention everybody I might have wished but these beautiful folks all get shout outs during the show.
Love you, all: Brenda Plowman , Maggie T. Watkins , Despina Kartson , Jill Huse , Deborah Brightman Farone , Jennifer Manton , Kevin Iredell , John Byrne , Ashley Stenger , Alycia Sutor , Susie Sexton , Don Sexton , John Mola , Nancy Myrland , Gail Lamarche , Heather Morse , Lindsay Griffiths , Laura (Toledo) Gutierrez , Gina Furia Rubel , Renee Branson, MA, CReC, CFT , Lisa M. Kamen, CAE , Athena Dion , Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit , Ronald McDonald House Charities Ann Arbor , Clark Hill. 💕
My assessment of The Color Purple in all of its sundry adaptations always has been first processed through the narrative structure of Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book. I don’t say that to sound pretentious. The novel is structured as a series of letters to God, first by Celie and then by her sister Nettie. As such, the narrative takes on a fragmented, dreamlike, haunting, episodic quality. The story beats all come in the form of firsthand accounts that we the reader interpret cumulatively to understand the hopes and horrors of the central characters’ lives. Imagine if the Brothers Grimm had been steeped in the American miasma of misogyny and racism and told Cinderella in reverse. (I know Cinderella was written by Charles Perrault. Just roll with me here.)
I’ll be forever grateful that Professor Warren Rosenberg at my small all-male college in rural Indiana (Wabash College) made this novel required reading, along with Toni Morrison’s equally gut-punching The Bluest Eye. We then were all tasked to watch Steven Spielberg’s film adaptation of The Color Purple as well. (Because I had a beautifully progressive mom we’d seen it in the theatre in 1985 when it first came out, but I gladly watched it again.) Professor Rosenberg’s assignment was for us to assess how the author’s intent shifted through the cinematic gaze and identify what was lost and what was found. I suspect that assignment is in great part why I continue to blog about movies three decades after that early 90s coursework.
But here I’ve done what so many well-meaning folks (men) do and I’ve fallen into the trap Spielberg did of making the narrative about myself. It ain’t.
That said, going back to the structure of the original novel, the reason Spielberg’s adaptation doesn’t quite work – stellar cast and production that it had – is because he couldn’t un-Spielberg himself. Spielberg was still stuck in “EVENT MOVIE” mode. The delicate, nightmarish nuance of Celie’s letters – unanswered confessions, prayers, and pleas – were lost in the sweep of an Oscar-bait film. Nonetheless, in great part without Spielberg and producer Quincy Jones, the original film might not have ever seen the light of day, given Hollywood’s general populist tendencies (stated politics aside). Regardless its flaws, the film served a crucial purpose in establishing Walker’s narrative in the public consciousness for all time. Of course, career best performances by Whoopi Goldberg and Oprah Winfrey are really what lasted in the mind’s eye. And the irony that I first offered credit to two men – Spielberg and Jones – given the work’s core message of women reclaiming their agency against all odds is not lost on me.
So, this self-indulgent “look what I know” preamble aside, what does all this mean for Blitz Bazawule’s musical remake of The Color Purple? In my humble opinion, the film is the perfect distillation of the central thesis in Walker’s work – that strength comes from within and through sisterhood and that the socioeconomic deck has long been stacked against African-American women in every way possible. And, at least for me, the musical form is the best cinematic framework for the epistolary structure of Walker’s novel. Each song is staged like an unanswered prayer, a moment in time (joyous, tragic, introspective) where the characters reveal their truest perspective on the nightmarish forces at work in their lives. Bazawule, who brought a similar sensibility to Beyoncé’s Black is King, embraces the heightened theatricality of the film musical, juxtaposing hardscrabble existence and tuneful escape beautifully. (At times, I thought of Lars Von Trier’s heartbreaking Dancer in the Dark. Bjork’s character in that film endures her own series of tragedies and finds solace in music, sometimes inspired by the industrial noise around her.)
That is not to say this new adaptation is without flaws. The first act – young Celie and Nettie before they are horrifically separated – just doesn’t connect the way it should. This is a shame because it is this bond that should set the stage for all that is to come, how Celie has lost half her heart, and how important it is when her life comes full circle. The opening scenes between Halley Bailey (Nettie) and Phylicia Pearl Mpasi (Celie) are lovely, lilting even, with a dynamite new ditty in “Keep It Movin’.” However, the early scenes all feel formulaic. The stakes are not raised high enough when Celie is forced by her father to marry Mister, nor when Mister forces Nettie from his home, declaring the sisters shall never see each other again. (That’s one scene that Spielberg DOES nail, if I recall, because his biggest gift is in capturing childhood terror and innocence lost.)
Fortunately, once the adult ensemble enters the picture, the sheer force of their talent and their dynamic rights the ship. Fantasia Barrino is remarkable as Celie. This is not an easy role – Celie has learned to survive by shrinking, hiding her dreams, her hopes, her anger, and her disappointment in a God (and a family) that seemingly abandoned her. Maybe Job is a better analogue than Cinderella! Yet all the pain must remain bubbling under the surface, just beyond view. Celie is a character whose agency has been utterly stripped away, yet she still must be a compelling protagonist, not relying on audience sympathy alone. It’s not a “showy” part in that way. YET, it’s a musical. And Fantasia has a VOICE. What she builds throughout the film is indelible.
She’s aided and abetted by Danielle Brooks as Sofia and Taraji P. Henson as Shug Avery. Both characters are pivotal influences on Celie’s awakening and are such larger than life personalities that they run the risk of driving her nearly off the screen. That doesn’t happen here. Both Brooks and Henson bring love AND fireworks to their portrayals. If I were to continue my belabored Cinderella-in-reverse metaphor, consider them the antitheses of the Evil Stepsisters. Brooks lights the screen on fire with her showstopper “Hell No,” and Henson picks up that baton nicely for its musical complement “Push Da Button.” Both women (and songs) anthemically reclaim power for women in the film. Sofia has tragedy ahead while Shug does not, but by the final act the three women are arm-in-arm, celebrating the power of unity. Their number “Miss Celie’s Pants” is such a barn-burner that it nearly eclipses Celie’s 11 o’clock number “I’m Here” (but not quite). Taken together, the music fuels the film and propels this trio to empowerment through reclamation (and we gladly go along with them).
I also should highlight Colman Domingo’s performance as the villainous Mister and Corey Hawkins’ as his conflicted son Harpo. Either character could devolve into being a melodramatic foil to the plot. Both actors avoid this deftly. Don’t get me wrong, Mister’s treatment of Celie is as vile as the day is long, but as Celie finds her footing and ascends, Mister’s world crumbles. Domingo does a lovely job finding the notes of burgeoning self-awareness without ever becoming maudlin. Similarly, Hawkins does not play Harpo for crowd-pleasing comic relief. Rather, we see Harpo studying his father’s ways, ultimately rejecting them, and finding his own place in this world. If The Color Purple carries a feminist message (and I would argue that it does) then it’s crucial that the men in this world find enlightenment as well, and in this adaptation they do.
When we first meet Brooks’ Sofia, she’s proudly stepping into a bar to confront her future father-in-law. The patrons point out a sign on the wall that reads, among other things, that women are not allowed in the establishment. She deadpans in reply, “I read what pleases me.” And if there’s a message I took from this latest Color Purple it is that. Don’t let the naysayers derail you – and, oh, how they will try and seemingly succeed – but there is power in the collective. And that unanswered prayers are answered here on earth by those who truly care about us. Read what pleases YOU!
Thank you, 9Sail and Joe Giovannoli, for all you do for our profession and community. Such a gem! Thank you also to Lynn Tell for inviting me. And Todd Rengel, you are an absolute delight. Greatly enjoyed this conversation and being able to share my free-ranging perspectives on our collective future.
In this installation of 9Sail’s Legal Marketer Webinar series, Roy Sexton, Director of Marketing at Clark Hill and President of the Legal Marketing Association, and Todd Rengel, legal marketing technologist and President of Animus Rex, Inc. joined 9Sail founder and CEO Joe Giovannoli to reflect on this year in legal marketing and review trends for the future.
Key takeaways:
Market Consolidation: continuing law firm consolidation is likely, in part arising from increased competition from technologically savvy firms that have a mature infrastructure and strong, highly specialized teams already in place. Marketers should prepare to play a larger role in strategy, and to encourage their firms to be proactive rather than reactive.
Increase Team Efficiency: One of the best things marketers can do, both in budget and in use of technology, is to streamline and find the pathways that are most efficient to satisfy the needs of their internal lawyer clients and external firm clients.
Be Digital: It’s vital for legal marketers to engage in effective digital marketing, or be left behind.
Thank you, Wabash College! ✨… Roy Sexton, Director of Marketing at Clark Hill Law and 2023 International President of the Legal Marketing Association – LMA International, has been named to the INvolve People Outstanding 100 LGBTQ+ Executives Role Model List for 2023.
While at Wabash, Sexton was a double major in English and Theater, was a member of Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity, Student Senate, The Bachelor, and the Wabash College Theater.
The Outstanding LGBTQ+ Role Model Lists supported by YouTube showcase LGBTQ+ business leaders and allies who are breaking down barriers and creating more inclusive workplaces across the world. They aim to represent the wide range of impactful and innovative work being done for inclusion across different countries, organizations, and sectors, and celebrate the diverse range of inspiring individuals who have made it their personal mission to make a difference.
INvolve is a consultancy and global network driving diversity and inclusion in business. Through the delivery of advisory solutions, awareness workshops, talent development programs, INvolve drives cultural change and creates inclusive workplaces where all individuals can succeed. They publish annual role model lists recognizing and celebrating business leaders and future leaders who are breaking down barriers at work and inspiring the next generation of diverse talent.
Thank you, Ashley Merryman and U.S. News and World Report! I am really deeply honored to be included in this wonderful piece on the intersection of culture and brand and how that fuels growth in a law firm. You’re doing such a lovely job featuring our industry. Fun fact: the last time and only other time I’ve been in U.S. News & World Report was my freshman year of college when they covered Wabash College’s inimitable homecoming events. And you can see my foot in one photo. It’s somewhere in this house. Heaven helped me!
EXCERPT: For example, Clark Hill, one of the nation’s 200 largest firms, acquired several smaller firms around the country. Following that, its leaders decided that establishing a common culture between its offices and practices was essential, says Roy Sexton, director of marketing for Clark Hill and current international president of the Legal Marketing Association – LMA International. …
To achieve a culture change, “You have to take big swings,” Sexton says.
Therefore, once leaders have assessed the current culture, they should have a small group develop an action plan, avoiding committees that turn ideas into bland consensus.
Once established, attorneys and staff should see themselves in the new culture. If they do that, they will become ambassadors of it, he says. …
Once the firm adopts its framework, develop a brand and messaging espousing these values. Distribute videos, brochures, even water bottles and T-shirts, to promote the approach, Sexton says. …
Include external audiences in buy-in efforts as well, since clients want to know about a firm’s values and how the attorneys approach their work, Sexton says.
During Clark Hill’s effort, Sexton’s team released videos interviewing people discussing their work. Through internal promotions and social media, more than 700,000 viewers watched them.
“The launch is just the beginning, and the least interesting thing,” Sexton says.
Leaders should conduct quarterly town halls. Human resources and marketing teams should release weekly newsletters and additional materials. And if a plan resonates with the firm and its clients, stick with it.
Sexton is amazed when firms change strategies based on feedback received from lawyers at competing firms.
“Don’t let the committee kill a great idea, and don’t be more concerned about gaining the approval of your competition than leaving them in the dust,” Sexton says.
EXCERPT: Roy Sexton, Director of Marketing at Clark Hill Law and 2023 International President of the Legal Marketing Association – LMA International, has been named to the INvolve People Outstanding 100 #LGBTQ+ Executives Role Model List for 2023.
Other honorees include Julia Hoggett, CEO, LSE plc and Head of Equities, Capital Markets at LSEG; Jen Carter, Global Head of Technology at Google; Avon Neo, Head of Global Markets Sales to Private Banks Asia at Nomura Singapore Limited; Adam Moysey, Chief Financial Officer at NBCUniversal Studio Group; Caroline Farberger, Chair, Board Executive in Financial Services, Investor, G7 Advisor at Caroline Farberger AB; and David Furnish, CEO/Chair of Rocket Entertainment Group/Elton John AIDS Foundation. …
In their recognition, INVolve wrote, “Roy Sexton is the Director of Marketing at Clark Hill PLC. He has actively contributed to the firm’s PRIDE affinity group in terms of messaging and content creation. He has helped align the firm’s marketing efforts to support educational content, both within and outside the firm, via video messaging, social media, Q&As, panel discussions, outside speakers. Last year, their marketing campaign – including their values, diversity and inclusion messaging – was named 2022 Best Marketing Campaign from the London-based Managing Partners’ Forum for a professional services organization. Roy is the 2023 international president of the 4,000-member Legal Marketing Association (LMA) and has been a leadership member since 2021. He also serves on the governance board committee of Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit and was marketing chair for Ronald McDonald House Charities Ann Arbor’s board.”
The other day, I posted an article my cousin Krisan Gregson found about my misspent youth, and the strange, wonderful creative endeavors in which I was involved. In that article there was a mention about Indiana State Police public service announcements I had filmed. One of my intrepid Facebook friends Melanie Hughes Davis managed to find them on YouTube. Here they are in all of their grainy glory.
I remember feeling quite special at the time, even though kids at school then made hideous fun of me. Story of my life. 😅🫠 But Sergeant Rod Mitchell was a truly lovely, deeply kind, amazing human being. I felt like he was a real life superhero. One of my earliest memories of good people doing good things.
Admittedly, I did a dodgy screen capture from YouTube using my iPhone here. Forgive my poor cinematography skills. But if you want to know how to stay safe in winter weather, or how to cross the street, have I got a deal for you. Lol.
I never had voice lessons. I didn’t sing in high school choir. But when I was attending Wabash College, I suddenly found myself craving all the music my parents listened to when I was growing up: Barbra Streisand, Sammy Davis, Lena Horne, Doris Day. And I would go to the Walmart or Target in Crawfordsville, Indiana (we only had two stores … lol) and grab any CDs I could find. Columbia House helped too! I may still owe them for some of those discs, come to think of it. And I’d pop the shiny objects into my Discman that plugged into a tape deck in my swanky 1986 Buick Century and sing WAY out loud as I drove. Those artists “taught” me how to sing.
A few years later, I was cast as one of the leads in The Fantasticks. My mother, who DID have formal vocal training, told me years later that she was terrified over what was about to unfold. She said that once I opened my mouth and let out a warble, she knew I was going to be ok.
And I think I love singing for the very reason that it’s always been mine. No one forcing rules or expectations on me. Just doing it the way that feels natural to me. It refills my well and brings me joy. Not sure if it does the same for the audience, but that doesn’t stop me. Everyone needs something like that in their lives.
So, I leave you, in my way, with a song. “Both Sides Now” by Joni Mitchell became one of my mom’s favorite tunes before she died. And I think I know why. In this beautiful yet poignant moment of transition in my life, its lyrics speak to me in a way they never did before. I hope they will hold some meaning for you as well.
Thank you for this opportunity to help bring something back to a community that has given me so much. 2023 will be a highlight of my career and life. And thank you for letting me be my weird and open-hearted self. That may be the best gift of all.
Love you…
P.S. For those wondering how the whole “playlist” thing got started, one more, to bring us full circle: “AmpliMix … the OG” on Spotify and Apple Music. This was created about a year ago this time for our LMA leaders kick-off (regional presidents, international board, committee co-chairs and SIG co-chairs). It only feels right to share this far and wide. Hopefully, you’ll enjoy the positive vibes here – and maybe use this mix to ring in the New Year!
P.P.S. And for completists out there (like me!) here’s the full list of this year’s playlists. Thanks for letting me share the soundtrack in my head with you all year long!
President, 2023 LMA International Board of Directors
Director of Marketing, Clark Hill
Check out the LMA Fireside Chat with LMA 2023 President Roy Sexton, and President-Elect Kevin Iredell, moderated by Interim CEO Ashley Stenger, reviewing LMA’s successful 2023 and looking ahead to 2024!
FLASH PROMO: Register by December 31 to be entered in a drawing for a free room night and room upgrade — plus get the Early Bird discount!!
If you ever wondered why I am the crazy nut I am … thanks to my cousin Krisan Gregson for finding and sending. I was truly fortunate to have the parents, upbringing, and home I did … full of creativity, hustle, and love. #youngauthors #ptareflections #indiana #onlychild
ICYMI … yesterday, incoming 2024 Legal Marketing Association – LMA International President Kevin Iredell and I as well as Interim CEO Ashley Stenger held our annual meeting via zoom in the form of remarks and Q&A, following the release of our 2023/24 overview “Fireside Chat” video via YouTube.
Wonderfully, that YouTube video has had over 550 views so far and is still available to watch here.
As for yesterday’s follow on Q&A and updates, you can view that by registering here (membership required). That will trigger a link to be sent to your inbox that you can follow for viewing.
Next year, Kevin plans to bring back a longstanding tradition of our annual meeting being held at our annual conference. I know we will all be “all in” for that!
Thank you, James Stickford, R.J. King, and DBusiness Magazine, for the lovely coverage here. Grateful for everything you do for our Southeast Michigan business community. You do such a lovely job helping all of us feel seen and appreciated! READ HERE.
EXCERPT: Roy Sexton, director of marketing at the Detroit-based law firm Clark Hill Law and 2023 International President of the Legal Marketing Association – LMA International, was named to the 2023 INvolve People Outstanding 100 LGBTQ+ Executives Role Model list.
The Outstanding LGBTQ+ Role Model Lists are supported by YouTube and showcase LGBTQ+ business leaders and allies for breaking down barriers and creating more inclusive workplaces across the world.
INvolve is a consultancy and global network that works toward diversity and inclusion in business. Through the delivery of advisory solutions, awareness workshops, and talent development programs, INvolve drives cultural change and creates inclusive workplaces where all individuals can succeed. They publish annual role model lists recognizing and celebrating business leaders and future leaders who are breaking down barriers at work and inspiring the next generation of diverse talent.
Sexton is the 2023 international president of the 4,000-member Legal Marketing Association (LMA) and has been a leadership member since 2021. He also serves on the governance board committee of Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit and was marketing chair for Ronald McDonald House Charities Ann Arbor’s board.
Thank you, Authority Magazine / Medium, for the opportunity to be interviewed about legal marketing and what drives me to do what I do. And much appreciation to Tanner Friedman’s Joel Epstein for his hard work on this piece, his facilitation, and his steadfast support.
“Create a focus group together of people inside your organization, both people who’ve been there a long time and people who are relatively new arrivals and then a group of clients, ones who’ve been with you a long time and ones who are relatively new. If you can afford to, hire an outside firm to conduct your brand research. If you cannot afford that, proceed internally.”
As a part of our series about “Brand Makeovers” we had the pleasure to interviewRoy Sexton.
Roy Sexton leads Clark Hill’s marketing, branding, and communications efforts and is the President, International Legal Marketing Association. He has nearly 20 years of experience in marketing, communications, business development, and strategic planning.
Thank you so much for doing this with us! Before we dig in, our readers would love to “get to know you” a bit more. Can you tell us a story about what brought you to this specific career path?
My entry into marketing was serendipitous. It started while working in turnaround planning, management consulting and doing similar work for a healthcare system. When I completed my MBA, my boss at the time asked me to take over the hospital system’s marketing efforts. I protested mentioning that I’d taken only one marketing class during my MBA studies. The boss insisted. “You’re service oriented. You think about the needs of the organization and what our overall goals are,” she said.
Thus began a path to marketing. I’d studied English and Theater as an undergraduate and was interested in storytelling and delivering the narrative. I moved on from the healthcare sector taking a job at a law firm, and that’s when it really clicked, and I hit my marketing stride. I enjoy working with attorneys, helping them find their respective voices as part of larger message positioning for leaders in particular legal sectors.
Can you share a story about the funniest marketing or branding mistake you made when you were first starting? Can you tell us what you learned from that?
As the sole marketing practitioner at a law firm resources were slim. At that time, it wasn’t readily apparent what photos in Google images were public domain … and which weren’t! Foolishly, I decided to jazz up a post for the firm’s website with a stop sign image I’d found. Bad idea! Alas, the firm received a cease-and-desist order with a demand for minimal financial restitution. The firm assigned one of its attorneys to resolve this situation, one who had heard of Google images but didn’t know how to find it. It was a delicate process that took a lot more time and care to resolve because the attorney kept typing “Google images” into Google and wondering why the stop sign didn’t appear. And snapped, “I’ll ask the questions,” when I kept trying to explain. I learned a lot that day. Nothing teaches you like a stupid mistake!
Are you able to identify, here it is, the tipping point in your career when you started to see success? Did you start doing anything different? Is there a takeaway lesson that others can learn from that?
I’m evolving as my career unfolds. About 15 years ago, I worked with an executive coach on the personal and professional challenges (I) was facing. At that time, I was over eager, trying to do all the work and was convinced that people didn’t want to work with a gay man. I assumed doing everything perfectly would be my ticket to acceptance.
My coach told me, “Everybody knows your orientation. Everybody likes you. Why are you still trying so hard? Why don’t you slow down?” It took another couple of years, but I realized it was OK to pick the moments where I was going to focus my energy. I am going through another phase now. At 50, I’m president of the International Legal Marketing Association and working for a large law firm. I’m being more reflective and letting things evolve before jumping in with solutions. I’m letting colleagues come to their own resolutions around things in the team. Unlike the Oscar awarded movie, I don’t need to be, Everything, Everywhere, All At Once, anymore. I’m learning to step back, be a coach, be a consigliere, and not drive myself into the ground trying to be all things to all people.
Are you working on any exciting new projects now? How do you think that will help people?
My group is currently working on our data capture, flow, and pipeline. This is crucial in our digital age. Normally you would want to address what the marketing data looks like and how it is being used first, but we knew five years ago when I joined the firm that we needed to work on branding and developing a cohesive message, given the growth and maturation of the firm. We need to invest in proper CRM, but not just CRM for CRMs sake. I want to define a pipeline experience for our attorneys geared toward clients and prospects. I believe it will be transformational and provide a good line of sight on our client experience. It’s about converting the experience of how people engage with marketing. We’ll be able to measure more effectively the impact of marketing and business development. We’re prioritizing the time attorneys are spending, by creating a formulary with the goal of eliminating occasional random acts of marketing that may or may not actually impact things.
What advice would you give to other marketers to thrive and avoid burnout?
You don’t need to put your life on hold, so exercise and take care of your health. Know when to turn things off and be done for the day. Step away and enjoy your family. This is important for your mental health. You’ll be a better professional with your organization if you walk away from it sometimes and rest. I learned this recently from executive coach Axelle Flemming and it resonates with me, “If you live in the past, that’s where your depression is going to come in. If you live too far into the future, it’s just going to be anxiety all the time.” You have to live in the moment you’re in.
There are times when I don’t need to respond to everything immediately. Usually others will respond, and they’ll figure out the issue. Then I can either affirm or offer a solution. Don’t try to be the hero every time. Nobody wants that anyway. Just be a colleague and help people through things.
In a nutshell, how would you define the difference between brand marketing and product marketing or advertising? Can you explain?
I specialize in marketing legal firms, first and foremost focusing on brand awareness and industry sector presence. Unlike, say, steel or oil businesses, law firms do not think of themselves as commodities. They provide a service. Before I can get to product marketing, which, in our case, would be an individual attorney or a particular service being offered, people need to know who we are and why we matter. Brand awareness. And that’s not just achieved by slapping your logo on anything standing. Law firms won’t admit that they are a commodity. They are. Everyone’s well-educated and proud of their work. They don’t want to think about themselves like a commodity. Who would? You need to stand out — your value proposition clearly, repeatedly articulated. It’s a service, especially on the corporate side. If you jump too quickly to the individual, you lose the lift of the entire organization because many companies are like, “Let me partner with a law firm that can satiate a lot of my different needs and I can work with a team of people that can understand holistically my challenges. I don’t just want one individual.” Media relations and social media are very useful tools for labeling your brand and identifying values that you live up to.
Can you explain why it’s important to invest resources and energy into building a brand in addition to the general marketing and advertising efforts?
Because I don’t think you know what you’re advertising until you work on the brand. I think that’s what too many people do. They’re dealing with internal pressure to be viable in the marketplace. You have to have your story straight, what are we telling people? If you do not take a strict approach your messages can be fragmented and difficult for the external world to understand. And the world is not breathlessly waiting on what your company has to say, so you must make it matter to them.
Start with a clear brand identity, message, and it isn’t just logo and look and feel, although that’s part of it. Some people are visually oriented, some are linguistically oriented, some are sonically oriented. Consistency is key. Disney does a good job of this. You always know something’s Disney related because it’s got a common look and feel. It’s in the DNA. But then there are divergences within that that can satisfy different needs and interests. Start with who you are before you start advertising. Otherwise, you might as well light your money on fire in the parking lot.
What are a few reasons why a company would consider rebranding?
I think you need to evaluate your brand every three or four years. You don’t need to redo it all, but much like the decor in your home, you have got to ask, “Does this still speak to us? Is it limiting us? Has the market environment changed?”
You might not need to rebrand, but you might need to tweak the brand you have. That’s going to keep your brand going a lot longer too. If you get regular oil changes in your car, it’s going to last longer than if you just wait until the engine blows up. But then I think at that five, six-year mark, you have to take a more distanced look and say, “Is this brand still us?”
Chances are it is, especially in a law firm; it’s not going to change that dramatically. But if you’ve grown considerably, if you’ve dropped off some services you used to do and don’t do anymore, if there’s been a dramatic change in the composition of your attorney complement, those might be triggering points for a rebrand.
For my firm, the branding we had when I arrived needed a refresh. The firm has grown significantly into other geographic markets through multiple combinations. So, it was the right and necessary time to refresh the brand and make it coherent across our growing firm. We also needed to raise a new flag that everyone saw as their own, so they’d leave behind brand identities from the past that still felt like a comfortable old shoe. Sometimes, it’s the psychology of the people especially in a law firm. If they like the brand, they’re going to fly the flag on your behalf. If they don’t, they’re going to use their old names and their old pens.
I think if your culture’s fragmented, if it’s been around too long, or if you’re getting feedback also from your customers that they feel like things are stale, listen to that and fix it, but take the time to do it right. This cannot be done on a whim or instantaneously. Take your time, consider the marketplace and your position in it before making any decisions. You’ve got to work behind the scenes with all the different stakeholders and get them excited about the new brand and have them feel like they’re part of it and then unveil what it looks like. The fact of the matter is, 70% of the people who make the biggest decisions inside your organization will have already seen the brand before it’s broadly unveiled. But you’ve built that consensus so they’re all excited to have it go into the world.
Are there any downsides of rebranding? Are there companies that you would advise against doing a brand makeover? If so, why?
Yes, there can be downsides to rebranding. Here’s an example, not legal: two well-known entities in the same line industry merged. They tossed their names and came up with a new name that means nothing to anyone. That says to me, they did it for internal political reasons without considering their external market at all. You might have needed to rebrand, but first take stock of the things that still have resonance and if that causes political turmoil inside your organization, so what? Deal with that. Don’t go to market with something because you’re keeping the internal important people happy.
You might end up damaging relationships with clients and the customers you are pursuing. I don’t think there’s ever a bad time to consider and look at your brand. If your brand has cultural cache and it means something to people, and its shorthand now, don’t change it to please internal stakeholders. But if you feel like it’s holding people back in your organization and creating market confusion because you’ve let your brand just, by the game of telephone, evolve, take a moment of intentionality and say, what is this and why are we doing it? Also, don’t change things just because you feel bored with them. This is a principle of communication, especially internal communications. Don’t just change things willy-nilly because you’re getting tired of it. That’s not a reason to change a brand. Maybe it’s a reason to buy a new pair of shoes or repaint a room in your home. It’s not a reason to change your brand.
Can you share five strategies that a company can do to upgrade and re-energize their brand and image? Please tell us a story or an example of each.
First, create a focus group together of people inside your organization, both people who’ve been there a long time and people who are relatively new arrivals and then a group of clients, ones who’ve been with you a long time and ones who are relatively new. If you can afford to, hire an outside firm to conduct your brand research. If you cannot afford that, proceed internally.
Show them the brand as it currently exists and have them react. Let it be fresh and you might be surprised by what people tell you, so I’d start there. You can ask what is working for you and what you would change. For the internal audience, ask if this is reflective of who you are in your identity and the work? For example, part of a brand needs to be the retention of talent and the acquisition of new talent. The brand plays both sides of client acquisition and talent acquisition. Before you start playing with fonts and colors and go to the fun stuff, do the planning exercise. Listen and learn. Find out what the observations are and try to go in there without any predispositions. Have an intentional engaged process of internal stakeholders and clients to find out what words they associate with you. “What is the value? Why hire us? Why work here?” This creates engagement and will inform on assumptions. You may be surprised by the feedback. Once you get alignment you can go forward, but I still wouldn’t jump to font, color and look and feel.
Second, informed by this focus group feedback, look at the language you are currently using: is there a disconnect between what people are viewing, thinking and believing and how you are writing about yourselves? If you have somebody that’s a strong writer on your team, let them take the lead. Chances are people have been feeling and thinking already about the language being used. Do an inventory of the language you’re using and say, we don’t have enough of this, or it isn’t accurate or reflective now. Once you’ve done your external view, looked at the language and the voice of who you are, then you can turn to brand look and feel.
The third step, which is where everyone wants to go first, is do we need to change the way we look and feel?
Is it time for a new logo or is your logo still a viable reflection of who you are now? It’s a great opportunity to freshen things up and get people excited. It’s also incredibly difficult to get it right. If it isn’t broken, don’t fix it. If your logo hasn’t been touched for 20 years and your company has grown with a lot of new colleagues, clients, and/or customers who don’t identify with the present look and feel, you have an opportunity to get people excited, create community, and refresh the logo to give people a sense of inclusion.
People never get excited about the words, but they do get excited about a new website and a new color scheme and a new logo and whatever. So, there’s a bit of theater to that. But think strategically. It’s expensive. You have to change all of your collateral and every sign across the land. It’s easier to change the words than the marks. It takes an investment to adjust everything, and it all must be 100% accurate. And you must have buy-in from the powers that be. You don’t want to get stuck with a logo everybody hates and wants changed again in two years. This would create even more market confusion.
Fourth, communicating the planned changes is essential to having internal buy-in and the way it’s rolled out into the marketplace is key. I’m a firm believer in the power of video, particularly in professional services. I don’t think people are using it enough, and I think they’re afraid of it, and I think they cheap out on it. For us, we needed a sexy, interesting way to provide vibrancy to the brand. We had developed a sophisticated, sleek European looking brand. This was a great pivot for us. It’s very different. It was going to get people’s attention, but we didn’t have any way of really communicating that to anybody, and we didn’t have any way of making it feel alive. Especially coming out of the pandemic, people were craving human connection.
We orchestrated the brand video and subsequent videos where the voices of all those people we talked to about our branding were included on camera. No one wants to hear the marketing guy talking about why our firm is important. Clients don’t want to hear from a third party. They’re hiring lawyers. They want to be comfortable with those people and know they’re part of a larger team that’s smart and approachable. And that’s why we landed on visual storytelling. Is anyone going to pick up a phone and hire a lawyer because they saw a great video? No, but are they going to then explore your website and read your articles and pay a little closer attention to you because they watched that video. Yes, that worked for us. I would offer that as a step and it’s an investment, but you can do a pretty decent video in the Midwest for $16,000 to $20,000.
You don’t need to do hundreds of them, do one good one and cut it a lot of different ways. Create smaller segments for social media and think like a campaign. We all have short attention spans, which brings me to the fifth point. Don’t treat social media as some extra. It’s all part of a multi-pronged strategy. We still have this generational divide in organizations, but don’t just dump content on your website. You need a good syndication strategy with your content because we’ve gotten to the point, we can almost eliminate some of the intermediaries and I can make sure people see my content without having to depend on anybody else to get it in front of them. But then the crucial part of that is social media and people are always like, “Oh, that’s for the kids, or that’s people looking for jobs, or why are we putting any time and energy into that?” Because it’s low cost. It’s where people consume content. It has shaped the outcome of presidential elections now repeatedly. It has a power to it that for some reason those in the starched white shirts are like, “Oh, just social media. Can I take you for a round of golf?” People have gotten less business/social. They don’t want to take time away from their families anymore. They want to consume content when they want to and how they want to. You create the video, you create the media, you create the alerts, you can then make sure they get out on those channels and grow your audience because a lot of the old ways of marketing might not be available to you anymore. Additionally, you need a good media relations strategy.
We don’t yet have Customer Relations Management technology, so we have to find other ways to continue to expand our presence and awareness. But it also allows us to get very targeted very quickly in the larger guise of that brand launch. My point is you can’t just build it and they will come. It’s important to create the spokes that bring people back to that new brand and make it alive for them. The video content can humanize your firm, and then you’re still selling your new brand year two, year three, year four. Just because you launched it once doesn’t mean that’s the end of it. You should keep putting that in front of people and social media is a great way to do that.
In your opinion, what is an example of a company that does a fantastic job doing a brand makeover? What specifically impresses you? What can one do to replicate that?
I’m an entertainment junkie and remember reading, Disney felt they had a gap in the boys’ category in the early 2000s. Most of us don’t have the budgets that a Disney has, but it fascinates me the way they can acquire something that has had its own identity for decades and minutes later, with the wave of Mickey’s magic wand “Oh yeah, Marvel’s Disney.” Marvel was Marvel. Disney found ways to integrate Marvel’s superheroes into their existing machinery without losing any prior identity. Disney assimilates beautifully and mass markets licensed products to capitalize on their merchandise streams. People who love Marvel for what Marvel was, are not left in the cold because they left a comic company alone but expanded its visibility a billion fold.
They did the same thing with Star Wars. That fascinates me. I think any industry or company can take their cue from that. We’re seeing a lot of companies grow through acquisition. Oftentimes a holistic group is now part of a larger organization. An announcement is made, and then no one takes the time to onboard or assimilate the acquired staff. The work actually begins when the deal is closed, and you need to spend a year or two acknowledging and enforcing what makes these new people special, enhancing your overall brand.
And when you combine or acquire, make sure you find ways to retain and integrate. Work hard to make sure new additions are not pulling against the new management arrangement with their old organizational ways. Emphasize that they’re getting the benefits now of a larger distribution network and gaining visibility that they didn’t have before, but don’t lose what made them unique. Why did you want them? There must have been a reason you acquired those people that came with the deal.
When you’re doing that onboarding and acquiring, it can’t just be marketing’s role to say, “Hey, are we onboarding these folks well? Are we integrating them into the organization? Do they understand the value they now have? Are we mining what they do well and not tying their hands and making them frustrated so they leave that?” It has to be a coordinated function. That’s where the replication comes in. Be transparent with the people who are now part of that and say, here’s our timeline. Here’s what we’re going to do. It’ll work well when you monitor the process, debrief, document it and then repeat that process with each new part of your organization. Then get your larger operational administrative team on board to say, “You guys all have pieces.” Getting buy in from all of the internal constituents is key to success. Put a timeline together and meet regularly as a collective, IT, finance, office operations and HR and lay out the pieces of the brand work. Everybody has some skin in the game and a vested interest in the new organizational structure and the outward facing marks and language being employed.
You are a person of great influence. If you could inspire a movement that would bring the most amount of good to the most amount of people, what would that be?
If I could wave a wand and get everybody to stop a certain activity, it would be this and I think everyone would benefit from it. Stop managing people for style. It can be politicians, it can be corporate entities, it can be your religious institution, it can be your family. How somebody dresses, who they love, what they eat, how they spend their free time is irrelevant to the work at hand. Limiting people only makes them uncomfortable.
Can you please give us your favorite life lesson quote? Can you share how that was relevant to your life?
I’m grateful that my late Mom told me this when I was five years old and I will keep that in my mind until I die, “You don’t have to play with people if they don’t play with your toys in the way you’d like them to.. You can always say no if people aren’t playing well with you.” This was in the context of a neighbor kid breaking a hand-me-down Barbie Jeep I’d received from my cousin! But I think the life lesson applies still. The other thing my mom always said was, “Tell people what they mean to you in the moment when it will mean something to them.” That continues to serve me well and how I honor her memory every day.
Thank you so much for these excellent insights! We wish you continued success in your work.