It’s a Tuesday night in June, and hundreds of women of color in communications arrived in their finest floral dresses for a luau at the Ritz Carlton Kapalua.
One by one, each is welcomed with a lei made of the most fragrant fresh flowers. They’re treated to traditional Hawaiian entertainment and a meal. The event closes out another day of the ColorComm Conference in Maui. Speakers during the three-day retreat included MSNBC “AM Joy” host Joy-Ann Reid, Girlboss CEO Sophia Amoruso, and Endeavor’s Chief Marketing Officer Bozoma Saint John. This fifth annual conference represents an important milestone for ColorComm’s founder Lauren Wesley Wilson.
Just seven years earlier, ColorComm’s founder, Lauren Wesley Wilson, was 26-years-old and working at a public relations and communications agency in Washington, D.C. As she examined her goals and looked across the company, she realized there were no people of color in the executive levels of leadership.
“I wondered, ‘How can I get there if I don’t see people who look like me?’ We know if young [people in the workforce] do not see themselves in leadership they will leave you,” Wesley Wilson said. “They will move on because they will feel there’s no place to advance where they are.”
The troubling observation led Wesley Wilson to organize a series of invitation-only luncheons where she heard from her peers – and learned shared the same concerns. Eventually, that turned into the creation of the Women of Color in Communications organization followed by conferences, a fellows program, a millennial summit, and ultimately, Wesley Wilson leaving her agency job to devote her time to increasing diversity and inclusion initiatives throughout the communications industry.
“When it comes to executive leadership positions in our industry, they often times are mostly dominated by white males,” she explained. “We are focused on increasing the visibility and accomplishments of women of color working in leadership and helping them stay in the industry because they have the resources and tools to be able to do so.”
As a result, Wesley Williams has created a community of women of color who are shattering glass ceilings and aspiring to make their presence the norm in public relations, marketing, and other communications fields. ColorComm members are given access to learn firsthand from executives.
But there’s also an expectation that they assist one another and those who may have less experience.









