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Production Insight: WHY ADVOCACY IN GAMES FEELS INEFFECTIVE NOW

08.09.2025
Production Insight: WHY ADVOCACY IN GAMES FEELS INEFFECTIVE NOW - Walla Walla Studio

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Is Advocacy Broken in Game Studios?
Here’s How to Fix It

The Advocacy Dilemma: Promises vs. Progress

The game development industry has made diversity and well-being rallying cries in recent years, but many inside studios remain skeptical. Are advocacy efforts actually improving our workplaces, or are they just box-ticking exercises? As the stakes rise—amid high-profile reports of burnout and exclusion—teams are demanding real, measurable change, not just good intentions.

What’s Going Wrong—and Why It Matters

Despite well-meaning advocacy programs in many organizations, the truth is often discouraging. Diversity committees form, meetings are held, and bold statements are made, yet the day-to-day on studio floors can feel unchanged. Developers from underrepresented backgrounds still face barriers, and studios struggle to tackle systemic burnout, while leadership claims progress is “in the works.”

Real-world Consequences: At several major studios, employee-led groups have called out the lack of feedback loops—initiatives are launched without follow-through, making it hard to gauge what’s working. This leads to disengagement: when developers don’t see concrete changes, participation drops. Staff survey data often stagnates or worsens, amplifying a sense of cynicism and fueling attrition. The result? Studios risk losing top talent, eroding workplace morale, and missing out on the innovation that comes from genuine inclusion and well-being.

A Roadmap to Effective Advocacy: Make It Measurable

To move advocacy from a feel-good exercise to a driver of real change, studios must embrace transparency, feedback, and accountability. Here’s how:

  1. Launch Regular, Targeted Surveys
    Craft short, focused surveys to understand the most pressing concerns—diversity, burnout, psychological safety, and more. Ensure anonymity and offer multiple ways to participate.
  2. Share Survey Findings Openly
    Publish aggregated results in staff meetings, internal wikis, or newsletters. Transparency builds trust and signals that leadership is listening.
  3. Set Specific, Time-Bound Goals
    From hiring benchmarks to well-being initiatives, outline what success looks like. Use survey data to inform these goals and make them public within the organization.
  4. Publish Progress Reports
    Quarterly or biannual updates are key. Detail what’s improved, where efforts stalled, and how priorities are shifting. Honesty (even about setbacks) builds credibility.
  5. Iterate Together
    Make space for feedback and questions after every update. Encourage all levels—especially underrepresented voices—to shape next steps.

Checklist: Is Your Studio’s Advocacy Effective?

  • Are issues tracked and regularly revisited?
  • Can team members easily find advocacy goals and progress?
  • Is it clear who is accountable for each initiative?
  • Do staff feel heard, and do they see follow-up on feedback?

Industry Insight: Turn Insights Into Action

Top-performing studios don’t just gather feedback—they close the loop. When Ubisoft Toronto openly mapped their post-survey action items and shared updates in town halls, participation and morale spiked. Transparency isn’t a one-off event: it’s a muscle.

Bring Advocacy Back to Life

It’s time to move past lip-service and create change that your team can feel and measure. How is advocacy working at your studio? What would make your efforts more credible and effective? Share your thoughts below—or take the first step by surveying your own team this month.

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    Parallax - Walla Walla Studio