“That鈥檚 a girl's聽game,”聽my daughter said, pointing to a box in Wal-Mart's toy department. It was Operation,聽the surgery game that I often played鈥攚ith girls and boys鈥攚hen I was a kid. But this new version depicted Doc McStuffins, a cartoon girl who wore a sparkly headband and pink stethoscope. At just six years old, .
Studies have found that whether we're six or 36, seeing and buy into its ethos. Women gravitate to things that have a female image or spokesperson, while men do the same. In the realm of outdoor sports, the packaging聽has almost always depicted men being active. (Witness , which prompted this ).听

That's why I'm encouraged to see recent efforts by gear companies and retailers to represent more women in marketing materials, product descriptions, and branded content, including the blogs, videos, and articles that the brands聽circulate on social media and their websites.聽
Take REI, which just announced a major initiative to boost its representation of women (and bought a number of ads in our May XX Factor聽issue, on newstands now). “The Co-op has committed to putting women first and foremost in all of its storytelling for the remainder of 2017,”聽the company said this week in a release.聽

It's part of project, which attempts to close gender gaps in the outdoors in聽four ways: donating $1 million to nonprofits that create opportunities for women in the outdoors; ramping up its design and production of women's聽technical gear;聽offering more than 1,000 classes and events targeted at women; and filling its social media channels with images of women backpacking, paddling, cycling, and skiing. In other words, the company will showcase women getting after it鈥攁nd sell those women more gear in the process. It's smart business that I can get behind.聽
“For me, it's been crucial to see other women out there as mentors and role models,”聽says Jainee Dial, an outdoorswoman who co-founded the聽online marketplace for women鈥檚 gear鈥嬄犅爄n November 2016. The site sells women's products made by environmentally-conscious companies, and it聽also publishes stories of women setting examples in outdoor athleticism and activism.

“I personally think it's essential to see outdoor women represented in the media in a real and authentic way,”聽says Dial. “Seeing those images, we subconsciously think, 'I can do that too.'”
It's a lot like Hasbro's appeal to my daughter. Only Wylder wants its photos of gear-wielding women to change the gender makeup of the entire outdoor community. Such 鈥攆rom rock climbing to fishing to hunting. “They're permission, a nudge, an invitation, and social change,”聽says Wylder's co-founder Lindsey Elliott.

Of course,聽women can represent products that are not intended for women alone鈥攍ike a tent. I want to see more of that such marketing. This spring, , which isn't specific to women (it's the kind of light-but-livable shelter any backpacker would appreciate). But it was designed by women and Big Agnes touts the聽female touch on the tent's feature list. The company also donates a portion of its profits to , a nonprofit dedicated to increasing female participation in outdoor activities. “I hope we sell a ton of them,” says Agnes co-owner Bill Gamber.聽聽
So do I.聽