I don’t see anyone in the creative dept that looks like me, what next?

This post is part of THE DEEP STUFF — reflective answers to the questions senior creatives ask when confidence and direction start to shift.

I write these pieces as a coach and a former creative director. I work with experienced creative leaders who are navigating confidence loss, change, and the pressure to stay relevant. No platitudes. No fridge magnet philosophy. Just saying what I hear.


You look around your office and realise something has shifted. The faces are younger. The references are different.  And you find yourself thinking : this is not my beautiful house….

Creative environments are highly visual, social systems.. We read them instinctively.

(It goes without saying that representation cuts more than one way. Much-needed progress around representation has rightly focused on who has been excluded for decades — by race, gender, class, and access. That work matters, and it’s far from done.)

You may still be capable, relevant, and contributing, but the cultural signals around you have changed.  This is especially true if you’re in a youth-coded culture, or you’re white or male in spaces actively rebalancing power

When this moment isn’t examined, it’s easy to leap to one of two conclusions. I’m being edged out, I should leave. Or, I need to try harder - sound younger, look cooler, stay visible.

Neither of those conclusions is particularly honest. On one hand you might be abandoning value that’s still needed. On the other over-adapting can mean erasing yourself to stay acceptable.

So, Instead of asking: Should I take this as a sign?

Try asking: What is this environment about? Does this fit with how I want to work now?

This shifts the focus from personal adequacy to contextual fit. It gives you the space to consider whether your experience is being used or merely tolerated. Whether your values still align with the culture.

Not seeing yourself reflected doesn’t automatically mean it’s time to go.

But it is worth paying attention to what’s being asked of you and what you want to do with that information.

If you like this mini series and have a question you don’t mind being answered publicly (no names obvs) get in touch by email jude@theshapeshifter.co.uk

Discover more thinking from THE DEEP STUFF — the real questions senior creatives ask.


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The govt. says it’s appointing a Freelance Champion for the creative industries, am I right to feel sceptical?

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I’ve got the title I always wanted, so why don’t I feel creative anymore?