Government Advertising: Campaigns for 2015–16 and 2016–17

The 'Stronger Councils, Stronger Communities' and the 'Dogs deserve better' government advertising campaigns complied with the Government Advertising Act and most elements of the Government Advertising Guidelines according to a report released today by the NSW Auditor-General, Margaret Crawford.

However, some advertisements were designed to build support for government policy and used subjective or emotive messages. This is inconsistent with the requirement in the Government Advertising Guidelines for 'objective presentation in a fair and accessible manner'.

Advertisements in the 'Stronger Councils, Stronger Communities' campaign used subjective statements such as 'the system is broken' and 'brighter future'. While advertisements in the 'Dogs deserve better' campaign used confronting imagery such as gun targets, blood smears and gravestones.

The perceived urgency to advertise impacted how the agencies engaged creative suppliers and the notice given to book placement of advertisements in the media. Due to this approach, it is hard for the agencies to demonstrate that value for money was achieved for both campaigns.

The report makes four recommendations to the Department of Premier and Cabinet. These aim to help agencies comply with existing requirements and improve transparency where the need to commence advertisement is deemed to be 'urgent'.

The Government Advertising Act 2011 requires the Auditor-General to conduct an annual performance audit to check NSW Government compliance with the Act. This audit examined two campaigns: The 'Stronger Councils, Stronger Communities' advertising campaign run by the Office of Local Government and the Department of Premier and Cabinet during 2015–16; and the 'Dogs deserve better' campaign run by the Department of Justice during 2016–17.

Further information

Barry Underwood, Executive Officer, on 9275 7220 or 0403 073 664 and email barry.underwood@audit.nsw.gov.au.