Title | BAND TOGETHER |
Brand | TRANSPORT ACCIDENT COMMISSION |
Product / Service | INSURANCE |
Category | G04. Social Behaviour |
Entrant | SDWM Melbourne, AUSTRALIA |
Idea Creation | SDWM Melbourne, AUSTRALIA |
Production | AIRBAG Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Post Production | AIRBAG Sydney, AUSTRALIA |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
James Orr | SDWM | Creative Director |
Jake Turnbull | SDWM | Design Director |
Jarrick Lay | SDWM | Business Director |
Alberta Gunner | SDWM | Copywriter |
Kean Szczur | SDWM | Art Director |
Caterina O'Brien | SDWM | Account Manager |
Bella Plush | SDWM | Designer |
Sebastian Covino | SDWM | Copywriter |
Nicholas Carlton | Airbag | Director |
Johanna Rayner | Airbag | Producer |
Thom Rigney | Thom Rigney Photography | Photographer |
Ryan Creevey | Ryan Creevey Photography | Photographer |
The Transport Accident Commission (TAC’s) ‘Band Together’ campaign, developed in partnership with the Australian Football League Victoria (AFLV), was activated across 1,200 clubs in Victoria. The campaign called on sportspeople, spokespeople and the community to wear a bespoke armband–inspired by black armbands worn to honour a death in the community–to scan the band’s QR code and record, share and wear their personal reasons to drive safely. Stories were shared on social, digital, TVC, radio and press, reflecting the active role the community plays in spreading the road safety message and our joint responsibility to protect the community.
The TAC and the AFLV have shared a partnered sponsorship agreement for over 11 years. With the road toll up 13% compared to the previous year, the TAC needed to continue the conversation in local rural communities, vastly overrepresented in road accidents. Here, community members are four times more likely to die or be seriously injured on regional roads than other drivers. The brief was to target male road users in these rural areas–those most vulnerable to road accidents and fatalities–so that they understood the responsibility they have to drive safely and protect their families, friends, teammates and the community on the roads. The objective was to galvanise local communities and take a stand against unsafe driving behaviours.
For the TAC’s inaugural Road Safety Round, we gave AFLV captains, community spokespeople and members of the local AFLV club a message they could wear. We transformed the traditional black armband –worn as a sign of respect to mark a death in the community– into a new blue armband. Each wearable armband featured a QR code that people could use to scan, discover and share their personal stories of losing a loved one on the road. Each video created was uploaded to a digital cloud server. Every time a QR code was scanned, a random video from the server would play to showcase the many important stories and reasons to drive safely on the roads. People shared their stories via social media to broaden the reach and impact of the campaign.
Target Audience: Regional Victorians aged 12+ with a particular focus on younger male drivers. Strategic Approach: With nearly every community affected by road trauma, our strategy was to use the sponsorship to provide a platform for local, regional communities all around the state to start the conversation amongst themselves. The campaign inspired people to talk to each other about the problem in a relevant way, rather than using a traditional fear-based approach. To better connect to tight-knit regional communities, we targeted them at a grassroots level. Endorsement of the message came from peers and members of the broader AFLV sporting community. On a weekend dedicated to road safety, we went to every community AFLV club and gave them a message they could wear. A conversation starter in the form of a new armband, a reminder of those who were lost on the roads.
For the TAC’s inaugural Road Safety Round, we gave AFLV captains, community spokespeople and members a message they could wear. We transformed the traditional black armband –worn as a sign of respect to mark a death in the community– into a new blue armband. The campaign spanned across social, digital, TVC, radio and press with a majority of media spent in regional outlets to target the core audience. Each local AFLV club was targeted with various direct and eDM communications to get behind the round. Community members shared the campaign on social media to further amplify the message, making everyone an advocate for road safety. The campaign ran for four weeks in total.
We engaged every captain, coach, and player to run out on the field during July 16-18 to wear an armband. This action generated PR for the TAC brand and their core objective: to eliminate deaths and serious injury on our roads. Every club became an ambassador for our message. The round saw over 1,200 AFLV clubs and their communities wear the armband. With over 750,000 bands distributed, people began to add their stories, helping transform the campaign into a community hub of road safety advocates. The campaign was seen by 598k people state-wide via ambassadors and 500k people via earned media. In total more we reached more than 1 million people nationally.
The campaign called on sportspeople, spokespeople and the community to wear a bespoke armband–inspired by black armbands worn to honour a death in the community–to scan the band’s QR code and record, wear and share their personal reasons to drive safely. Stories were shared on social through Instagram and Facebook through feed and story posts on personal accounts as well as club pages.