Eboni Munn

Eboni Munn

Eboni Munn is a Communications and Marketing professional with a demonstrated history of working in the nonprofit sector.

She holds an M.A. in Media Studies from The New School and a B.A. in Communications from Howard University. Building on her work with nonprofits, she spent the last three years shaping the voice of NYC Pride to include underrepresented LGBTQIA+ community members through branding, marketing, and press relations for WorldPride NYC | Stonewall 50.

For her efforts, she was awarded two Webby Award honorees, Branding, Marketing, Social Media, Viral Content achievements from the PR News Digital Awards and received a Telly Award for her creative direction for NYC Pride’s nonprofit marketing reel. In 2019, she became a consultant for the first National Trans Visibility March in DC providing design and marketing visuals, press support, and onsite support for community activists and speakers. Over the past 10 years, she served as a community organizer to elect Senator Barack Obama on Howard University’s campus and assisted in marketing support to hold HBCU’s accountable for unfair treatment of students. She also provided communications, marketing, and recruitment support to re-elect Councilwoman Viola Richardson in Jersey City, NJ.

She has worked with other brands, organizations, and media such as Friends of the High Line, Ghetto Film School, ABC 7, GLAAD, GMHC, God’s Love We Deliver, NewFest, Blavity, iHeartMedia, The Advocate, CBS, Univision, Time Out, and New York Post. In 2010, she provided communications support for the Association for Safe International Road Travel (ASIRT), a nonprofit that improves the personal safety of travelers around the world.

She was responsible for creating safety marketing materials and a working Congress database for the Global Road Safety caucus. Eboni serves as Dignity and Power Now’s Communications Specialist. She is committed to doing the work of continued visibility, inclusion, and equal rights for people of color, women, the LGBTQIA+ community, and people with disabilities.