Creative agency support for eSafety awareness initiative

Tender ID: 528914

Tender Details

Tender #:
23CeSC089  
Status:
Closed
Publish Date:
13 June 2023
Closing Date:
06 July 2023

Tender Description

Put simply, we need more Australians to know about the eSafety Commissioner (eSafety) and how we can help.

Recent research* conducted for the national Online Safety Act awareness campaign in 2022 found awareness of eSafety was relatively low, around 23%. Participants also had limited awareness and knowledge of where to go to report online abuse. Despite 78% of respondents identifying online safety as an important issue, only 33% knew what to do if they had a negative experience online and 51% felt online safety was relevant to them. There is also considerable conflation between online safety and other online risks like cyber security. The same research report found that when respondents were asked to identify online safety issues from a list of online issues, 91% incorrectly attributed one or more other issues as being an online safety issue.

Additionally, managing a broad remit and complex messaging while targeting diverse audiences with differing needs can hold us back from achieving cut-through.

We need to develop an emotive community service announcement (CSA) initiative to increase awareness of who eSafety is and what we do to help keep Australians stay safe online.

Key message: When it comes to online safety or reporting online abuse, eSafety can help.

Get: Australians

Who: Don’t know who eSafety is

To: visit esafety.gov.au

By: making them think online safety is important and relevant.

Other Instructions:

1. Required Services or Required Goods and Services or Required Goods

The successful supplier will need to deliver an emotive CSA initiative to increase awareness of who eSafety is and what we do to help keep Australians stay safe online to a budget of $66k (including GST).

This awareness initiative needs to reach the general Australian population, including all adults aged 18-45 who are less aware of online safety issues and might not know how to respond to negative online experiences.

This includes:

· Parents/carers

· Females and males

· Metropolitan, regional, and remote

· CALD

· First Nations people

· People with disability

· LGBTIQ+