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Futurebrand Rebrands Autism Association Of Australia For Advocacy Push

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Autism Awareness Australia has officially become the Autism Association of Australia. The transformation represents a definitive transition from raising basic public awareness to driving structural change for the autism community.

Developed pro bono by FutureBrand Australia, the project encompasses brand strategy, visual identity, language, and digital experience, representing an agency investment exceeding $100,000.

When the organisation launched nearly 20 years ago, public comprehension of autism was minimal. Today, diagnosis rates are at record highs, and Australia is navigating major reforms to its National Disability Insurance Scheme. A national survey commissioned by the charity highlighted that families still face a fragmented, difficult support system, making policy advocacy an urgent necessity.

Visuals by hand

The design system replaces corporate graphics with a personal, hand-drawn approach. A bespoke, handwritten typographical logo serves as the brand’s anchor, rendered in Chilli Red. This expressive wordmark is supported by line-drawn pictograms, cleverly constructed using the letter A to depict abstract human figures, families, and supportive structures like houses and schools.

The wider colour palette combines the primary Chilli Red with deep purple and soft pink backdrops across mobile interfaces. Campaign layouts utilise blocked photographic elements arranged to build secondary graphic shapes, such as a heart or the outline of the Australian continent, supporting the central brand statement: “All of Autism. All of Australia. All the way.”

Driving long-term advocacy

The peak body reaches hundreds of thousands of people annually, with its website drawing over 538,000 individual visitors and generating 1.5 million page views yearly. The rebranding ensures these channels communicate a unified message.

Nicole Rogerson, chief executive and founder of the Autism Association of Australia, said, “FutureBrand pushed us past ‘awareness’ and helped us find language and an identity that matches the seriousness of the fight ahead for Australian families.”

Rich Curtis, chief executive of FutureBrand Australia, said, “Amidst the complexity of that system, there is a pivotal opportunity for a bolder brand to make a meaningful difference – if awareness is no longer enough, what next?”

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