Stellantis boosts marketing efforts to reach Black customers with TKT Collab

The maker of Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram and other vehicles is boosting its marketing efforts to reach Black customers and other multicultural communities.

Stellantis NV on Wednesday said it has added TKT Collab — a division of Kentucky-based TKT & Associates, a Black- and woman-owned business — to its North America creative roster. It is the automaker’s first Black agency of record across Stellantis’ North American brand portfolio that will oversee marketing efforts to a Black audience.

Stellantis has worked with Black-owned agencies and put forth campaigns focused on Black customers in the past, but the partnership with TKT, the financial details of which weren’t shared, represents a strengthened commitment to those audiences and growing that consumer base, executives said.

“We are reminded as marketers that it is our responsibility to continue to embrace this ever-changing world with innovative thinking and to demonstrate our commitment not only to diversity, but to also being instruments of change,” said Kim Adams House, who was announced to lead multicultural marketing efforts in addition to licensing and merchandising, replacing Juan Torres, who left the automaker in October. “And that is precisely why we went through the rigorous process to identify a Black agency to focus exclusively on building more authentic and deeper audience connections with Black consumers across all of our North American brands.”

Stellantis has increased consistently its allocation of resources for multicultural marketing over the past few years, said Marissa Hunter, senior vice president of marketing in North America, though she didn’t provide details. The announcement comes after a group of Black media executives in 2021 led by mogul Byron Allen — the owner of The Weather Channel plus 16 ABC-NBC-CBS-FOX network affiliate broadcast television stations and a founder of his own entertainment company — drew public attention to automakers like General Motors Co. for their lack of spending on Black-owned media companies.

“We do continue to work very closely with his team, a relationship that we started with him and his team about a year and a half ago,” Hunter said. “The discussions that we’ve had with him and his team have been very productive, very insightful, and he’s offered perspective on marketing and how we should be poised with a diverse roster of partners.

“That has been very beneficial to the team. I wouldn’t necessarily say that it is a direct result of the partnership that we have with the Byron Allen Group that has led to this announcement today, but just an overall desire for us to make greater impact and more meaningful audience connections with these consumers is truly the reason for the formidable relationship with … the team at TKT.”