Look up, look out campaign

Look Up, Look Out is a campaign about distracted walking, with a focus on road safety. It is a social movement started by four undergraduates from Nanyang Technological University, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, with the intention of encouraging youth not to use their mobile de...

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Main Authors: Chia, Cherilyn Guat Joo, Chan, Joel Boon Jin, Ong, Sherry Hui Ying, Teng, Sydney Alexandria Hui Min
Other Authors: Pamela Tor Das
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/63178
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-631782019-12-10T12:52:10Z Look up, look out campaign Chia, Cherilyn Guat Joo Chan, Joel Boon Jin Ong, Sherry Hui Ying Teng, Sydney Alexandria Hui Min Pamela Tor Das Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information NTUC Income DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication Look Up, Look Out is a campaign about distracted walking, with a focus on road safety. It is a social movement started by four undergraduates from Nanyang Technological University, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, with the intention of encouraging youth not to use their mobile devices while crossing the roads. The campaign is the first road safety campaign targeted at pedestrians, where previous efforts on distracted commuting focused mainly on drivers. The campaign targets youth aged 17 to 25, as it was found that young people around this age group had the highest smartphone penetration rates, coupled with the highest weekly instant-message and social networking usage on smartphones. These reasons also influenced the platforms chosen to reach out to them, primarily through social media – Facebook and Instagram. Face-to-face interactions with the target audience were not missed out, with roadshows in schools forming the bulk of our on-ground efforts. This report provides a background to the issue of distracted walking, followed by the group’s primary research involving over 400 youth in the target age group. This research shaped the campaign’s main strategy of “Show, Don’t Tell”, along with the messaging and tactics employed. Successes, challenges, limitations and recommendations are also explored as part of the post-campaign evaluation. This evaluation provides an avenue for discussion, and may form the basis for future projects of the same thread. The appendix at the end of the paper also includes original communication materials, such as documents, collateral and diagrams for reference. Bachelor of Communication Studies 2015-05-11T00:55:16Z 2015-05-11T00:55:16Z 2015 2015 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/63178 en Nanyang Technological University 304 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Promotional communication
Chia, Cherilyn Guat Joo
Chan, Joel Boon Jin
Ong, Sherry Hui Ying
Teng, Sydney Alexandria Hui Min
Look up, look out campaign
description Look Up, Look Out is a campaign about distracted walking, with a focus on road safety. It is a social movement started by four undergraduates from Nanyang Technological University, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, with the intention of encouraging youth not to use their mobile devices while crossing the roads. The campaign is the first road safety campaign targeted at pedestrians, where previous efforts on distracted commuting focused mainly on drivers. The campaign targets youth aged 17 to 25, as it was found that young people around this age group had the highest smartphone penetration rates, coupled with the highest weekly instant-message and social networking usage on smartphones. These reasons also influenced the platforms chosen to reach out to them, primarily through social media – Facebook and Instagram. Face-to-face interactions with the target audience were not missed out, with roadshows in schools forming the bulk of our on-ground efforts. This report provides a background to the issue of distracted walking, followed by the group’s primary research involving over 400 youth in the target age group. This research shaped the campaign’s main strategy of “Show, Don’t Tell”, along with the messaging and tactics employed. Successes, challenges, limitations and recommendations are also explored as part of the post-campaign evaluation. This evaluation provides an avenue for discussion, and may form the basis for future projects of the same thread. The appendix at the end of the paper also includes original communication materials, such as documents, collateral and diagrams for reference.
author2 Pamela Tor Das
author_facet Pamela Tor Das
Chia, Cherilyn Guat Joo
Chan, Joel Boon Jin
Ong, Sherry Hui Ying
Teng, Sydney Alexandria Hui Min
format Final Year Project
author Chia, Cherilyn Guat Joo
Chan, Joel Boon Jin
Ong, Sherry Hui Ying
Teng, Sydney Alexandria Hui Min
author_sort Chia, Cherilyn Guat Joo
title Look up, look out campaign
title_short Look up, look out campaign
title_full Look up, look out campaign
title_fullStr Look up, look out campaign
title_full_unstemmed Look up, look out campaign
title_sort look up, look out campaign
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/63178
_version_ 1681041716085260288