Ad Age is marking Black History Month 2023 with our third-annual Honoring Creative Excellence package. (Read the introduction here.) Today, our guest editor Kwame Taylor-Hayford turns the spotlight to Sylvia Zakhary, the founder-CEO of agency/entertainment holding company Mamag Group as well as the founder of creative platform Storyhouse Foundation.
“I’ve long admired the work that Sylvia has been doing to bring creativity and culture together in highly crafted projects for artists including Beyoncé and Donald Glover,” says Taylor-Hayford. “Through Mamag and more recently Storyhouse Foundation, she’s created a real sanctuary and community to nurture the next generation of creative talent. Very inspiring!”
Here, Zakhary shares her thoughts on building an agency as a woman of color and creating a creative oasis.
When I started Mamag in 2016, there weren’t many women of color running agencies or production companies. There certainly weren’t many agencies dedicated to challenging the status quo and centering stories by creatives of color.
Although I had amalgamated over a decade of experience, brands simply didn’t have the confidence to bring their business to a new company, run by someone who did not represent “success” in their eyes. I spent the first year battling “no’s” and passive-aggressive rejection. Reaching a fork in the road, I was presented with two options: 1. I could go back to working freelance for companies run by mostly white men, or 2. I could fight my way through the “no’s” and do the “crazy thing” that would allow us to better see ourselves in the world. If you know me, you know I’ll always opt for the “crazy thing.”