奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 running-apparel company Oiselle announced today that has as an athlete-adviser. D茅sir听is the founder of the running group Harlem Run and the running advocacy organizations Run 4 All Women and Global Womxn Run Collective. She recently called out the running community for its racism and lack of coverage听following the news of Black runner Ahmaud Arbery鈥檚 murder鈥攆irst on Instagram, then in an essay for 国产吃瓜黑料. , the director of diversity and inclusion at a Washington, D.C., law firm and a marathoner, has also joined the company as an adviser on diversity, equity, and inclusion.
D茅sir founded Harlem Run in 2013 to create a space for Black runners to feel welcome in the running community. After the 2016 presidential election, she led a four-women relay run from Harlem to Washington, D.C., to join the 奥辞尘别苍鈥檚 March, raising more than $100,000 for Planned Parenthood along the way. D茅sir is also a mental-health coach, and she鈥檚 currently leading on the intersection of race, mental health, and fitness.
One component of D茅sir鈥檚 role will be brand ambassador: she鈥檒l wear Oiselle apparel and represent the brand at events, though Hoka remains her shoe sponsor. Elite runner Kara Goucher and former professional runner Lauren Fleshman have held听similar roles at the company for the past several years. (Fleshman also coaches an arm of Oiselle鈥檚 elite team.)听And like Goucher and Fleshman, D茅sir will help design her听own apparel line鈥攕he鈥檚 starting with socks鈥攁nd receive royalties from purchases. All three women will serve as athlete-advisers, a new title at the company. (Goucher听and Fleshman have had input on Oiselle鈥檚 activities听and products since they joined the company in 2013 and 2014, respectively. The new title formalizes their leadership positions.) As a Black woman, D茅sir says she brings a different lived experience and perspective to the brand than her white teammates.
As part of the hiring process, D茅sir and Oiselle founder and CEO Sally Bergesen听had a frank conversation about her role. 鈥淪he was clear that I was not the token Black woman and that it was not my responsibility to tell her every time there is a race problem in Oiselle,鈥 D茅sir says. D茅sir and Bergesen began getting to know each other over social media two years ago and met in person last year during New York City Marathon weekend. At the time, D茅sir had recently formed the听, a group whose mission was to 鈥渄isrupt the status quo of the male-dominated running industry.鈥 (The spelling of womxn,听, is designed to be inclusive听of all people who identify as women.)听The goal resonated with听Bergesen, who leads the brand with a strong, feminist bent. Bergesen went to D茅sir鈥檚 meetup before the marathon,听and the relationship grew from there into an 鈥渙rganic aligning鈥 on activism, social justice, and inclusive values, D茅sir says.
Another element of D茅sir鈥檚 role will be participating in the new advisory group Bergesen is creating to bring more diverse voices to听the top of the brand. In addition to Carter, Goucher, and Fleshman, the 11-person committee听will also include: , the founder of the ad agency Copacino + Fujikado; Michael Volz, Bergesen鈥檚 sibling听and a member of the LGTBQ+ community; and Oiselle president Atsuko Tamura, who joined the company in 2015.
The group will have input on all aspects of the company, including brand and marketing strategy, the growth of the elite and community teams, and product development. 鈥淎s a white woman, I鈥檝e had the growing realization that we need more diverse voices at our table,鈥 Bergesen says of the decision to form the committee. 鈥淭hose voices should be part of shaping business strategy and growth. Otherwise it鈥檚 just performative allyship.鈥
As members of the new听advisory group, Carter听and D茅sir believe the committee听is an important step in addressing racism. 鈥淥ur life experiences inherently limit what we know,鈥 D茅sir says. 鈥淭he more diversity we have, as it relates to race, gender, and beliefs, the [fewer]听blind spots we have.鈥 In her role, Carter will advise the brand on inclusive leadership鈥攂oth broadly among the brand鈥檚 top executives听and specifically to the women who lead Oiselle鈥檚 community team, known as Vol茅e. Vol茅e is open to anyone and currently includes 4,000 women across the globe听as part of an online community that also hosts local meetups and events.
Hiring D茅sir and Carter in the middle of a听national听reckoning on race was intentional, but not as reactionary as it might seem. Oiselle began a conscious effort to diversify both its elite and community teams back in 2011, not just around race, but also in terms of class, education, culture, and gender identity. Over the past four years, the brand has signed a number of women of color to its (six out of the 16 current track and field athletes are women of color) and worked to attract more Black and Brown听women to the Vol茅e team.
Carter has been at the forefront of the latter effort. When she joined Vol茅e听in 2013, she was one of a handful of women of color out of roughly 100 members across the country. In order to attract more women of color to the team, Carter began regularly posting photos of herself and other members of听Vol茅e on social media. Women of color reached out to ask about the group, and membership among Black and Brown听women gradually grew. 鈥淢ore diversity comes from more diversity,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen you see people who look like you, you think, OK, this is for me.鈥
In 2018, Oiselle began hosting Big Birdcamp, a weekend-long running retreat for Vol茅e members. At a photo shoot, participants听were breaking off into subgroups鈥攔unners from the same region, runners who trained with the same coach. Carter asked for a shot of all the women of color present. 鈥淚t was a fairly large group,鈥 Carter says, estimating there were around 30 women. 鈥淭hat was cool to see.鈥

The following year, Carter approached Oiselle about carving out space for women of color to meet separately at camp. Oiselle provided a room and put the meeting on the schedule. It proved an important development. 鈥淚t gave us space to be frank and honest about shared experiences,鈥 Carter says. After that听she started a private Facebook group for Vol茅e women of color, a forum she equates to affinity groups at other companies. 鈥淔or a lot of people, these spaces are a place you can breathe,鈥 she says, explaining that individual Black people often feel pressure to represent all Black people, which can affect how they present themselves to others. It鈥檚 a relief, she says, to have a place where Black people can just be themselves.
She adds that she feels 鈥渉eard at Oiselle, but not all women of color do.鈥 She cites the experience of one Black member who said she joined her white teammates one morning at camp and felt like she wasn鈥檛 seen, a sentiment that is often expressed by women of color. (Aliphine Tuliamuk, who won the U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials in February, recently that she felt invisible after winning the trials because much of the press coverage focused on the white women racing. Carter called out this bias in .)
Carter is quick to point out that creating inclusive spaces must be deliberate. She says听that the typical model for running and outdoor brands has been: build it and hope everyone comes. But if you want to create a diverse community, you have to begin with the end user in mind, she听says. Hats are an example: her afro doesn鈥檛 fit under most running caps. Black women with natural hair need a visor. Details like these may seem small, but they carry huge emotional weight. 鈥淗aving these options can signal, Hey, you belong here,鈥 Carter says. 鈥淲ithout them, the message is not only do you not belong, but we haven鈥檛 thought about how you might fit in.鈥澨(Bergesen says that the visor Oiselle now sells on its site is the result of Carter鈥檚 feedback.)
Carter will be facilitating a conversation about race and bias among Vol茅e鈥檚 4,000 members. She鈥檚 still in the early planning stages, but she hopes the team鈥檚 white members will do personal work around their own biases, privilege,听and racism. (Oiselle does not currently track the demographics of its 4,000 Vol茅e members. But after conferring with a few women of color on the team, the company plans to do a survey as part of its diversity effort.)
Carter and D茅sir听believe that in order to address racism in the running community, brands must be part of the solution. D茅sir says that people are, justifiably, turning to听companies听right now to demand听long-term commitment to equity and social change. (As Fleshman puts it: 鈥淲e all love running听and want brands to do more than sell us shit.鈥) Brands help shape culture, and they can either evolve into diverse spaces or continue to perpetuate systemic racism. Oiselle is still predominantly white, Carter says, but the brand is putting the structure and people in place that can lead to change.
Both Carter and D茅sir听hope that the current conversations on race happening in the running space鈥攕uch as that have 听and panel discussions like , on systemic racism in running鈥攎ove from discussion to action. To effectively address systemic racism, brands need to bring more diverse people into all parts of their organizations,听from employees to leadership, Carter says.
鈥淏lack womxn听are always critical leaders in all spaces,鈥 D茅sir added in an email. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important the workplace is ready for diverse leadership. That is, it is welcoming and not hostile, and that Black women are part of the company鈥檚 transformation and commitment to equity.鈥