In entertainment language, imagine having the job of Emily from Emily In Paris, or Samantha from Sex And The City.
For years, conversations about women breaking barriers focused heavily on STEM fields. You know the vibe: women coding apps, building rockets and surviving group projects with deeply underqualified men. But now, another industry takeover is impossible to ignore, and it lives inside the chaotic world of branding, campaigns and social media strategy.
So, what exactly is “women in SPAM”?
SPAM stands for Social Media, PR, Advertising and Marketing. Basically, the industries responsible for making brands look cool online, saving companies during PR disasters and convincing people they absolutely need a £7 iced matcha in a reusable cup.
The phrase is becoming a way to recognise the growing number of women shaping communication-led industries. These are the people building campaigns, running social accounts, handling public image disasters, crafting viral moments and somehow making corporate brands sound human on the internet.
And unlike outdated stereotypes that treat these careers like glamorous “easy jobs”, the reality is far messier. These industries require strategy, quick thinking, emotional intelligence and the ability to survive meetings where someone suggests making the logo “more fun”.
The girls are running the timeline
Women already dominate large parts of the PR and communications world. According to labour statistics, women hold a huge percentage of PR management and specialist roles, proving they are not just participating in the industry but actively leading it.
Industry leaders have also pointed out that communications work is deeply tied to business strategy and reputation management. Behind every viral campaign or carefully worded company apology is usually a team making high-pressure decisions in real time.
Image credit : Pinterest | The phrase is becoming a way to recognise the growing number of women shaping communication-led industries.
The leadership gap is real
Here is the plot twist nobody loves: despite women dominating many communication roles, leadership spaces still lean heavily male.
Recent industry reports found that most PR boardrooms remain male-dominated, while many professionals still feel workplace gender balance is unfair. A huge number also believe companies need to do far more to help women move into leadership positions.
So yes, “Women in SPAM” might sound funny at first, but it also reflects something bigger. Women are not just helping shape internet culture and brand identities anymore. They are becoming the voice, strategy and power behind entire industries.
