°ÄÃÅÐþ»úͼ

No Content Set
Exception:
Website.Models.ViewModels.Components.General.Banners.BannerComponentVm

Services

Technical services and consulting solutions for clients in the property, energy, transport, water, resources, defence and government sectors.

Advisory and management consulting

°ÄÃÅÐþ»úͼ advisory and management consulting services for businesses and projects, including economics, due diligence, transaction advisory, ESG and more.

Communications, creative and digital

Communications, creative and digital solutions for governments and businesses including community engagement, design, research, data and software development.

Laboratories

Scientific analysis services for AgroScience, food safety, workplace exposure, environmental analysis and contaminants of concern in Europe and the UK.

Planning and approvals

Development strategy, planning and approval solutions for buildings, infrastructure, transport and city projects and investments.

Project and program management

Project management solutions for the most complex building, infrastructure, organisational change, and systems projects.

Training

Specialist training services, programs and accreditation for health, safety and risk, project management, and energy sector capability development.

Sectors

World-leading technical and consulting solutions for clients in the property, energy, transport, resources, water, defence and government sectors.

Property

Design, technical and advisory services for the property sector, including residential, commercial, retail, industrial, health, education and data centre projects.

Energy

Energy exploration, development and optimisation solutions for renewables, power and gas networks, energy storage, oil and gas and nuclear facilties.

Transport

Smart, safe and sustainable transport infrastructure development services and advice for rail, aviation, port and road clients and projects.

Defence and government services

Expertise for defence capability and infrastructure investments, security and safety projects, and information and telecommunications initatives.

Water

Discover our industry-leading strategy, design and management solutions for wastewater, groundwater, flooding, drainage and network infrastructure.

Resources

Commercial data, design advice and technical management solutions for safe and environmentally responsible resource exploration and operations.

About us

Responsibility

Services

Technical services and consulting solutions for clients in the property, energy, transport, water, resources, defence and government sectors.

explore Services
Advisory and management consulting by °ÄÃÅÐþ»úͼ

°ÄÃÅÐþ»úͼ advisory and management consulting services for businesses and projects, including economics, due diligence, transaction advisory, ESG and more.

Due diligence

Economics

Strategy and transformation

Commercial advisory

Transaction advisory

Project investment and finance

ESG consulting

Deal advisory

Explore Advisory and management consulting
Communications, creative and digital

Communications, creative and digital solutions for governments and businesses including community engagement, design, research, data and software development.

Communications and engagement

Creative, visualisation and immersive design

Social advisory and research

Data management, analytics and insights

Spatial intelligence and GIS

Software development

Explore Communications, creative and digital
Design and development

Technical and consulting services for buildings, infrastructure and cities including architecture, engineering, surveying, landscape architecture and urban design.

Architecture

Lifts and escalators

Building services engineering

Civil engineering

Fire engineering

Geotechnical engineering

Landscape architecture

Structural engineering

Surveying

Utility options and design

Urban design

Explore Design and development
Laboratories

Scientific analysis services for AgroScience, food safety, workplace exposure, environmental analysis and contaminants of concern in Europe and the UK.

AgroScience analysis

Food safety analysis

PFAS Analysis

Environmental analysis

Analysis of unknowns

Workplace exposure analysis

Explore Laboratories
Oceans and coastal

°ÄÃÅÐþ»úͼ technical solutions for marine infrastructure and offshore development including coastal engineering, marine biology metocean science, and emergency response.

Coastal and marine geoscience

Coastal engineering

Commercial fisheries advice and services

Design criteria studies

Marine biology

24/7 response modelling and support services

Marine life mitigation - PSOs, MMOs and PAM

Maritime infrastructure

Metocean, Science and Technology

Modelling

Explore Oceans and coastal
Planning and approvals

Development strategy, planning and approval solutions for buildings, infrastructure, transport and city projects and investments.

Planning consultancy

Transport planning

Explore Planning and approvals
Project and program management

Project management solutions for the most complex building, infrastructure, organisational change, and systems projects.

Program management

Project management

Cost management / quantity surveying

Building consultancy

Explore Project and program management
Training

Specialist training services, programs and accreditation for health, safety and risk, project management, and energy sector capability development.

Health, safety and risk

Training: project management

Capability development and training for the energy sector

Explore Training

Sectors

World-leading technical and consulting solutions for clients in the property, energy, transport, resources, water, defence and government sectors.

explore Sectors
Property

Design, technical and advisory services for the property sector, including residential, commercial, retail, industrial, health, education and data centre projects.

Residential

Commercial and retail

Leisure and tourism

Industrial

Health and healthcare

Education

Data centres

Explore Property
Energy

Energy exploration, development and optimisation solutions for renewables, power and gas networks, energy storage, oil and gas and nuclear facilties.

Oil and gas

Renewables

Nuclear facilities

Power and gas networks

Storage

Explore Energy
Transport

Smart, safe and sustainable transport infrastructure development services and advice for rail, aviation, port and road clients and projects.

Rail

Aviation

Ports

Roads

Explore Transport
Defence and government services

Expertise for defence capability and infrastructure investments, security and safety projects, and information and telecommunications initatives.

Defence

Security and safety

Information and telecommunications

Explore Defence and government services
Water

Discover our industry-leading strategy, design and management solutions for wastewater, groundwater, flooding, drainage and network infrastructure.

Water management

Wastewater

Flooding and drainage

Groundwater

UK and Ireland regulated water asset management

Explore Water
Resources

Commercial data, design advice and technical management solutions for safe and environmentally responsible resource exploration and operations.

Mining

Waste

Explore Resources

Projects

We define, design and manage projects that create shared value to a complex, urbanising and resource-scarce world.

explore Projects

Brilliant minds finding solutions to complex problems, made easy to understand. Making complex easy.

Brilliant minds finding solutions to complex problems, made easy to understand. Making complex easy.

explore Insights

Engaging with the new Australia

°ÄÃÅÐþ»úͼ National Lead - Communications and Engagement, Kate Eskdale and Senior Engagement Advisor - Victorian Department of Health, Ai-Lin Chang on what the latest Census can tell us about Australian communities, and how we should engage with them.

16 September 2022 | 1 min read
Kate Eskdale

Asia Pacific

Australia

ON THIS PAGE
Contact us

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know that society is changing.ÌýBut what does the latest Census tell us about the new Australia and the future of engagement?

The typical Australian is more diverse, non-religious and more likely to belong to a one parent family than ever before. So, the days of running a few community drop-in sessions where the usual suspects turn up are over. At least they should be if we really want to understand what millennials, migrants and one parent families − typical Australians – really think.

The challenge for engagement practitioners? Changing our approach to ensure our processes are representative, and reflect the increasingly diverse preferences of Australians in sharing their views.

A lesson learned all too well by politicians the world over is that you ignore the silent majority at your peril. It’s not just the Boomers that we need to hear from in our engagement anymore.

We need a layered, nuanced and inclusive engagement approach.

Ìý

Infographic showing data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics

The early bird gets the worm

The temptation is to wait until you have detailed information about a project or initiative to start engagement conversations with local communities and stakeholders. But we need to start building relationships and trust earlier if we want projects to leave a lasting, positive legacy.

As practitioners, we should approach engaging with any new community the same way that we would approach building a relationship with a new friend or colleague. Trust takes time and is built on the back of honest, consistent communication.

Listening is the key to any lasting relationship. We need to take the time to understand what is important to people, what their experiences have been, and most critically, the best way to engage them.

Starting the conversation earlier gives all parties time to develop a much deeper understanding of perspectives, considerations and constraints – their own and others.

It also gives people who haven’t been involved with community engagement processes before more time and capacity to participate – learning how to get involved and why. This is especially important with young and culturally and linguistically diverse Australians.

Read more about engaging youth audiences here>>

Data is king

The era of one-size-fits-all communications is over. Targeted engagement approaches are here to stay.

Who are our new communities though? As wonderful and comprehensive as Census data is, there’s a trap in only using demographic data to inform our understanding.

We need to consider previous engagement results, movement data, social research and past engagement experiences (especially if they were bad), along with any other relevant quantitative or qualitative datasets.

This data must be contextualised with the myriad of socio-economic, cultural, linguistic and political factors that influence a community. And this is just the starting point to inform our engagement practice.

A community’s preferred engagement approach may not seem obvious at first glance. We mustÌýask.

A prime example of this is the common assumption that all Indian Australian communities would prefer to undertake engagement in Hindi. This assumption misses the nuance of the different ethnic and linguistic groups within the Indian diaspora, and the high levels of English-based education that occurs across the population. It also minimises the importance that shared cultural identity has in delivering effective engagement with diverse populations.

As our world radically changes, new technology emerges and perceptions shift, it is natural that community preferences will change over time.

Using data to better understand your community and how to engage them seems straight forward on the surface. On deeper inspection, these questions are often much more complex to answer but also create exciting opportunities to advance our engagement standards.

People participating in community meeting, laughing and talking

Knocking down the barriers

We need to facilitate engagement processes that meet our community’s preferences and needs. Doing so will vastly improve rates of participation and result in more representative, balanced views that can help us make better project decisions.

But this requires a major cultural shift. How do we create it?

For starters, we must begin viewing communities as the engagement experts. Where possible, we need to let them lead their own engagement processes.

After a bit of a rocky start this was deployed to great effectiveness during the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia. Using well-funded, co-designed advertising campaigns developed by culturally diverse community members to promote critical health and vaccination information to their communities, and having respected local leaders operate as the key information source on COVID-19 between communities and government were amongst some of the most successful engagement methods during this time.

We also need to make much more of an effort to remove the logistical barriers that prevent everyday people from participating.

Why would a single mother experiencing financial disadvantage go to an in-person community engagement event if she’s juggling two jobs, doesn’t own a car and the event is the same night as her child’s yearly school concert?

To make engagement opportunities accessible to everyone, we must address the web of circumstances that prohibit participation. This ranges from providing in-person and online options for all engagement activities, ensuring the date, time and location of in-person activities are appropriate, to providing stipends for transport and technology, and using recruitment tools including paid participation.

The silence is deafening

With a changing and increasingly diverse Australia, it’s not good enough to say ‘we heard’ from the community when we really only heard from the loudest, most motivated voices.

We must change our engagement practices to hear from those who have traditionally been silent or ignored.

Evidence-based decision making has become a standard expectation – and we will need to demonstrate that meaningful engagement was undertaken with a representative segment of the community.

An core value is that engagement practitioners must seek input from participants to design how they want to participate. In this new Australia, we need to embody this value more than ever.