71Signal
Score
C
Creative BoomJuly 3, 2026

Rachel Manys Posters Highlight How Creative Mothers Are Paying Twice For An Industry In Freefall

Rachel Many's project, 'Mother Load', uses striking visuals to highlight the challenges faced by creative mothers in a struggling industry. This work serves as a critical reminder for brand strategy, emphasizing the need for inclusivity and recognition of diverse talent, particularly women, in creative roles as companies navigate the complexities of modern work-life balance.

◎ EmergingcampaignstrategyidentityRachel Many

Creative Boom: Insight Creative Industry Rachel Many's posters highlight how creative mothers are paying twice for an industry in freefall The Los Angeles designer has turned the maths of motherhood into art, pairing sharp visuals with an essay that's funny, angry and backed by hard numbers. Written By: Tom May 2 July 2026 There's a particular kind of maths that creative mothers do in their heads, usually at 11pm, usually while staring at a laptop in a quiet kitchen. It goes something like this: How many hours did I actually work today? How many of those were interrupted?

And how much of my brain was simultaneously tracking school pickup, missing socks and the precise location of a packed lunch? It's an invisible spreadsheet that never balances, and it rarely shows up on a payslip. Rachel Many has decided to make that spreadsheet visible. Her new project, Mother Load, pairs striking posters with a companion essay that does something a lot of think-pieces about working motherhood fail to do: be both funny and angry, backed up with numbers that should make every agency leader wince. The posters themselves are sharp. Price tags stuck across a woman's face like she's reduced stock at a clearance sale.

A supermarket receipt itemising "maternity leave tax", "guilt" and "invisible labour" next to a total that simply reads "too much". A manila folder labelled "portfolio review" with a child's crayon family drawing tucked underneath. It's a clever, plain-speaking design bringing attention to a subject that usually gets buried in euphemism. The numbers behind it Rachel's essay relies on a December 2025 analysis by the Institute for Women's Policy Research, which found that mothers working full-time, year-round earned only 74.3 cents per dollar that fathers earned.

That figure becomes the running theme through the whole series: 74 cents to the dollar, printed large on a receipt, stuck to a face like a markdown sticker. The penalty compounds with each child, resulting in an estimated 5 to 7% drop in earnings each time. And it isn't only about pay. An audit study found that childless women received more than twice as many callbacks as equally qualified mothers with identical resumes. Meanwhile, fathers tend to get the opposite treatment: a documented bump in perceived competence and authority, sometimes called the "fatherhood premium".

Same life event, completely different price tag, depending entirely on the contents of your undergarments. Not to mention that the years a creative career is supposed to accelerate are exactly the years many women start families. There's no neat checkpoint where motherhood politely waits for a quieter moment in your CV; it arrives, as she puts it, regardless of where you've got to on the ladder. The brutality of consolidation However, that's just the start of the story: the first penalty isn't the new one. Rachel goes on to describe how that old bias is colliding head-on with a fresh one.

The creative industry spent 2025 in a brutal consolidation cycle. Omnicom cut over 4,000 jobs following its IPG takeover, WPP folded Ogilvy, VML and AKQA under one roof to "optimise" operations, and roughly 10,000 agency roles disappeared across the year. Teams didn't vanish so much as thin out, leaving fewer people doing the work of several, with AI fluency now an unspoken job requirement on top of everything else. For a parent with finite hours, that's a brutal equation. There's no spare evening to mess about with AI and fail safely at it when the evening is already spoken for by dinner, bath and bedtime.

Article truncated for readability. Read the full piece →

Intelligence PanelSignal score: 70.5 / 100
Primary Signal
Emerging
Building momentum — trajectory being tracked
Brand Impact
Medium
Impact score: 70/100 — moderate relevance to positioning decisions
Novelty
Moderate
Novelty: 60/100 — iterative development of an existing theme
Action Priority
Soon
Flag for the next strategic review cycle
Scoring Rationale

The article addresses significant issues faced by creative mothers in the industry, highlighting the need for inclusivity, which is highly relevant for brand strategy professionals, though the theme of work-life balance is not entirely new.

70
Impact
weight 35%
60
Novelty
weight 30%
80
Relevance
weight 35%
Brands Mentioned
RRachel Many
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