Now, Barbie is leaning in
with a 21st century gig as an entrepreneur.
Entrepreneur Barbie is
available in four ethnicities and carries the essentials of start-up life: a
tablet, smartphone and briefcase.
Mattel says it hopes to
inspire a generation of female entrepreneurs with Entrepreneur Barbie, which
went on sale Thursday on Amazon. She also comes with a marketing back story in
which Mattel partnered with eight real-life female entrepreneurs to serve as
"chief inspiration officers."
"Having positive role
models for dolls that are inspiring young girls to be entrepreneurs is exactly
what we need to inspire a generation of young women to start running
businesses," Reshma Saujani, founder of Girls Who Code, said in an
interview with TechCrunch. "You can't be what you cannot see."
"To me, Barbie has
always been a way to live out each and every one of my dreams and that young
women today have Barbie as a role model, an icon in the form of an entrepreneur
is so exciting and the best form of inspiration," said Jennifer Fleiss,
co-founder of Rent the Runway.
In typical start-up style,
Entrepreneur Barbie made her debut by hosting a Twitter #BarbieChat in which
she invited her #CIOs to share stories of "breaking glass (and plastic)
ceilings."
While many participants in
Wednesday's Twitter chat praised Barbie's latest career, Mattel faced familiar
criticism for pink-washing the message. Entrepreneur Barbie comes wearing a
fitted pink dress in her usual unrealistic proportions.
"If we're talking
representation, let's take a step back. It is impossible to ever grow up and be
Barbie. She's anatomically impossible (unless you get tons of plastic surgery
and survive on light and air)," writer Sarah Gray said in a Salon column.
"Entrepreneur Barbie is
modern woman with her smartphone and her tablet stuck in a sexist, outdated,
dangerous representation of femininity. I take umbrage with the fact that, even
though this doll is backed by an awesome group of diverse women — aimed at
providing positive representation — Barbie still represents this problematic
view of women."
The backlash is nothing new.
Barbie caused a stir in February when Mattel and Sports Illustrated revealed that she would appear in
the 50th anniversary edition of its annual swimsuit edition. The
partnership included a promotional cover-wrap on 1,000 copies declaring Barbie
"the doll that started it all," a four-page advertising feature
inside the magazine and video outtakes posted online. The doll was also
available for sale at Target.
Mattel stood by Barbie's
"unapologetic" stance, and continues to use the #unapologetic hashtag
in its social media campaigns for Entrepreneur Barbie.
Nice one all females, No more excuses to no job and no career.
ReplyDelete