ACON asks ‘How Do You Do It?’ in newly launched campaign via Frost*Design
Frost*Design (part of Frost*collective) continues its relationship with ACON, NSW’s leading HIV prevention, HIV support and LGBTI health organisation with the launch of ‘How Do You Do It?’
The campaign seeks to redefine safe sex by raising awareness about new approaches to HIV prevention that don’t always involve condoms. This week the full campaign is unveiled following an event in Taylor Square on the 13 February and a teaser campaign earlier this month.
The campaign’s integrated approach includes outdoor, print and social media. Stage one of the campaign asks the question – “How do you do it?” using a bold and direct typographic treatment consistent with the overarching ‘Ending HIV’ creative. The minimally branded bill posters and chalk stencils are intentionally open and ambiguous, designed to provoke a response.
Stage two features responses to this question from six gay men, visually coming to life using colour, photography and 3 x 30 second videos. Each of the three methods of HIV prevention uses a different colour – magenta for condoms, blue for PrEP and green for UVL (Undetectable Viral Load). A portrait series is also featured across the campaign.
Says Nicolas Parkhill, CEO, ACON: “Once again the Frost*Design team has delivered an exceptional campaign. The team have taken a complex set of messages and delivered a highly visible and engaging campaign that cuts through to our target audience. ‘How Do You Do It?’ is yet another example of strong strategy steered by great creative. We couldn’t be happier.”
Six Uber driver-partner vehicles are also a highly visible component of the campaign. Each car has either pink, blue or green decals with the words ‘I Do It On The Go’, ‘I Do It Every Day’ or ‘I Do It Daily’ prompting conversation about HIV risk reduction, and combination prevention strategies. Additionally, three maxi-wrap buses driving through popular routes with the LGBTI community are a colourful campaign inclusion.
While raising awareness around HIV prevention measures is key, the campaign objective is to continue to affect behavioural change building on statistically significant results from past Ending HIV campaigns. All prior campaigns have been created by Frost*collective. Key to the success of ‘How Do You Do It?’ is driving engagement and promoting active involvement moving beyond awareness of the issues to personally embracing responsibility of them.
In addition to the 3 x 30 second videos, a 90 second educational video starring the same local gay talent seeks to normalise conversations and provide information around HIV prevention. Used across social media and online, Frost*Design has used the same sense of fun and cheekiness that ACON has become known for across all video executions.
Says Ant Donovan, group creative director, Frost*collective: “For on five years now ACON has driven a consistent and highly visible effort to end HIV transmissions by 2020. The team’s commitment, collaborative spirit and vision to realise this mission for the health and wellbeing of the LGBTI and wider community is nothing short of honourable.”
Executive Creative Director: Vince Frost
Group Creative Director: Ant Donovan
Account Director: Max Delplanque
Designer: Alex Dalmau
Designer: Ryan Curtis
Junior Designer: Johnny Boardman
Production Manager: Jason Hughes
Photographer: Tim Jones
Videographer: Joshua Heath
Executive Producer: Matt Chee
Executive Producer: Tamiko Wafer
Video Editor: Ian Haigh
Stylist: Lucia Martinez
Matthew Vaughan – Principal Planner/Strategy, ACON
Michael Wacher – Campaign Producer/Strategy, ACON
12 Comments
more useless work for such a worthy cause. design agencies shouldn’t be allowed to do advertising.
are you incapable of constructive criticism?
I think sad just answered your question, stick to doing logo design and choosing typefaces.
@sad said Not according to research making your claim of ‘useless’ completely unfounded. Plus, it’s unlikely the client would have stuck with Frost without the results. Especially as a government NFP.
Hey @sad,
Read a decent advertising award annual. Check out bestadsontv and some of the other creative blogs. Apply for award school.
Ads are more than an exercise in design and type.
Try as they might design companies just can’t do advertising.Also can they please stop anointing themselves with fatuous new age descriptors for what they do.They are fucking DESIGN companies.They do logos,templates ,colour palates and annoying things like guidelines.So please stop all the new age bullshit and stick to your knitting.
Im not commenting on the work, just the unhelpful and boring rubbishing of it by the first poster.
A simple ‘this is shit’ contributes nothing. So if you can’t contribute. then why bother
check all the agency guys getting their knickers in a twist cos some their grass is getting cut!
Yeah, design agencies do ‘logos’ and ‘guidelines’ are annoying.
If more ad agencies tried understanding brands they’d get a lot more work past the clients
Back in 2015 Erik Ingvoldstad talked about why he left advertising. Before, and since then the conversation around advertising having lost its purpose and power has been discussed consistently. Read it here – http://www.campaignasia.com/article/why-i-left-advertising/433965. A strong argument for moving on. Ridiculing any one creative discipline because it feels like it’s crossed someone else’s turf fails to acknowledge the necessary evolution of the creative services industry as a whole, or the maturity of any one of them just wreaks of unproductive bitterness – in this instance Lee’s comments target the design industry. Each discipline has its place. All are subject to communication’s complexities. It’s how each deals with these that determines each brand’s success, and that of the agency. Best to be level headed and own the challenges rather than slip into competitive stupor.
TYLER SO HOT RIGHT NOW
This will get the desired reaction, and bold direct messages work in health advertising.
Good work by a bunch of clever creatives.
Hi Lee
Good to bump into you here. Coming late to this party. To borrow your phrase, I work at a fucking DESIGN company. Working with organisations like ACON we design outcomes like a 22% reduction in HIV diagnoses year on year. To get to an outcome like this, its sometimes necessary to do logos, templates, colour palates etc. We might also design environments, social engagement, digital and physical experiences, communications, or anything else that solves a problem, creates valuable experience and delivers a desired outcome. I understand from your post that this has caused you annoyance? Which is baffling. I invite you to come visit our studio in Redfern, perhaps we’ll both be less confused after that.