The 2023 winners of NSW Premier’s Multicultural Communications Awards (PMCAs) have recently been announced, and agency Think HQ took home the ‘Agency Campaign of the Year’ award for its successful ‘Racism. It Stops with Me’ campaign with the Australian Human Rights Commission.
The ‘Racism. It Stops with Me’ campaign prompts all of us to reflect on racism and its impacts, to build awareness of how racism operates at institutional and interpersonal levels and give people tools to recognise and address it.
Think HQ developed campaign assets including Community Service Announcement (CSA) videos, outdoor advertising, digital and social media content, campaign banners and other supporting collateral to stimulate open conversation and reflection – while avoiding blame or stigma.
Within days of launch, the Australian Human Rights Commission received 500 sign-ups to its email newsletter and 40 new organisational supporters, as well as a host of empowering and supportive comments via the website about the personal impact the CSA film had on people.
The campaign was picked up by key mastheads including The Guardian, SBS, ABC News and The Project. Aggregated audience reach from earned media coverage in the first week of launch was 81,757,938.
The PMCAs are the only stand-alone industry excellence program in Australia, and as a celebration of multiculturalism and creativity, more than 130 entries were submitted to the awards that recognise the invaluable contributions of professionals who skilfully communicate to diverse audiences across the state.
The 12 winners of the PMCAs were announced late last week, showcasing the achievements in the multicultural media and marketing industries.
NSW Premier Chris Minns said: “NSW is proud of its record as one of the most successful multicultural states in the world. Our people come from all across the globe, with one in three of us born overseas, one in two with a parent born overseas and one in four speaking another language in the home. These awards acknowledge that diversity and I commend everyone who entered because providing information in community language is what keeps our society strong.”
“We are thrilled to have been recognised in this way for our work on ‘Racism. It Stops with Me’ with Australian Human Rights Commission, and I couldn’t be prouder of the entire team. While measuring the impact of conversations about race will never be an exact science, we know the campaign is reaching countless Australians and planting the seeds for change, which is so important and also exceptionally rewarding to be a part of,” said Jen Sharpe, Think HQ founder and managing director.
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Top Image: Andy Lima, Jen Sharpe, Craig Foster and Chin Tan