There has been much buzz about Detroitโs resurgence, but few know about the millennials that are quietly pushing the Motor Cityโs comeback. Amber Lewis is one of those helping to bring about that change.
Lewis, 25, heads the digital and social media department for the City of Detroit and its mayor, Mike Duggan. In that role, the Detroit native manages the social channels for various offices and produces content including videos, official statements and announcements.
Lewis hadnโt always eyed a career in Detroit โ she planned on working in New York City after graduating with a degree in advertising from Michigan State University in 2015.
โThe press I read about Detroit wasnโt reflective of what I saw in my hometown,โ Lewis said, thinking about her decision to reject an opportunity to study fashion marketing at LIM College in Manhattan. โMy intuition told me to stay in Detroit and be an agent to change the narrative. My intuition was right.โ
Lewis was hired by Dugganโs chief of staff, Alexis Wiley, in 2016 after she participated in the Marcus Graham Project, an organization that helps people of color enter the marketing and advertising industries.
Since then, Lewis said she has brought much-needed awareness to the administrationโs efforts to help invigorate the city and its residents.
โThe biggest part about these opportunities is creating awareness around them, and thatโs why my role is so important,โ Lewis told HuffPost. โItโs getting information about programs and initiatives out to the public by telling the story of Detroiters who have benefitted from them, opposed to just saying that these programs are available.โ
Programs like Motor City Match, which provides funding to entrepreneurs for businesses throughout the city, or Motor City Restore, which assists local business owners who need to make improvements, are some that have benefited from Lewisโ social media campaigns.
โThere are so many programs and initiatives designed to improve the quality of life for Detroit residents happening in the neighborhoods that really make what I do meaningful,โ Lewis said.
But the young Detroiter can have fun with the social media channels, too.
Engaging social media campaigns like #DetroitLoveLetter and #DetroitCommandments have caught the attention of residents and local businesses active on Twitter and Facebook.
โIโm proud to make the cityโs social channels more fun and engaging through our campaigns and content,โ Lewis said.
In 2013, the Motor City filed the largest-ever municipal bankruptcy in the nationโs history. The city is still recovering from that setback, but Lewis is hopeful.
โI think Detroit is an interesting but good and exciting space. We are building, expanding and creating new opportunities that all Detroiters can benefit from,โ she said.