General Motors Co. pledged to increase the amount it spends on advertising with Black-owned media companies, a move that comes amid growing pressure on U.S. corporations and Madison Avenue to diversify the outlets where they advertise.

The nation’s largest auto maker by revenue on Thursday said it would allocate 4% of its U.S. advertising spending on Black-owned media companies by next year and would boost that level to 8% in 2025.

GM’s announcement comes after media mogul Byron Allen and other Black media executives took out a full-page ad in several papers, including the Detroit Free Press and The Wall Street Journal, accusing GM of ignoring Black-owned media outlets.

The ad was an open letter to GM Chief Executive Mary Barra and said the car maker spends less than 0.5% of its advertising in Black-owned media, even though “African-Americans make up approximately 14% of the population in America and we spend billions buying your vehicles,” according to a version of the ad that ran in the Detroit Free Press.

In a statement, GM said the figure of less than 0.5% was inaccurate, noting the current number was 2%. General Motors is one of the top ad spenders in the U.S., and it spent $630.8 million on domestic ads in 2020, down from $1.1 billion in 2019, according to estimates from ad-tracker Kantar Media. Kantar data exclude spending on social media.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

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