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Rockthorn

Gaining 33,098 LinkedIn impressions

  • 8,011 Instagram accounts reached
  • 33,098 LinkedIn impressions
  • 685 Instagram profile visits
  • 218 LinkedIn followers

Two people working in construction in the UK die by suicide every day. That’s over 700 people a year.

Our Goals

Breaking the Silence in Construction

That’s a shocking loss of life, isn’t it.

Stress, depression or anxiety accounts for 27% of all work-related illnesses in construction. The construction industry in the UK has a male majority, who are far less likely to speak up and seek support for their mental health. This culture is part of what leads to such large statistics, and it has to end.

This is what Rockthorn’s director Stuart Curtis believes. Rockthorn is an unbeatable plant supplier in the UK, with Stuart at the helm. Stuart has witnessed members of on-site and off-site teams struggling with their mental health in his years in the industry and has heard stories from his peers of their own experiences. He knows that the mental health of everyone working in the construction industry is incredibly important, and wants to end the stigma attached to talking about personal struggles.

He came to us wanting to create a campaign to raise awareness, and we were honored to help.

Our Goals

Building a Healthier Industry

The plan was to create something powerful. Something with impact.

Our ultimate aim with this campaign was to open people’s eyes to the silent struggle of construction workers everywhere. We wanted to provide information to raise awareness through a social media campaign, while also offering support in the form of a physical sign for construction sites complete with the contact details of professionals.

We knew we wanted to get a charity involved with this project. We hoped to lift the issue from the page and move it into a real-world solution, for the charity to be able to offer its services to anyone seeing the graphics and signs.

Above all else, the goal was to get people thinking, talking, and, hopefully, reaching out a hand to each other. A simple ‘how are you really doing?’ to a coworker or an offer of a cup of tea and a chat can often mean more to someone than we realize.

What We Did

Confronting construction’s mental health crisis

To start, our social media executives Alex and Lewis and digital marketer Ellie got together and found materials to inspire the beginnings of the project. After a brainstorming session with the Nu Image directors, they had a solid direction they wanted to take the campaign.

The first solid shape of the campaign was the physical sign for construction sites. For the design, we used the MAYA principle – Most Advanced, Yet Acceptable. This is the concept that doing something too ‘extreme’, no matter how aesthetically pleasing, may have the reverse effects that you want due to it being too much for the intended audience. By using a construction site-style design for the symptoms sign, we were able to introduce something innovative yet familiar for those viewing it, increasing its impact.

What We Did

Laying the foundations for mental health support

The rest was built around the certainty of the physical sign, taking inspiration from it and resulting in the concept of interviews with real people within the industry to talk about their own experiences. We were unsure how many people would have the confidence to take part – it’s a big deal to put yourself out there, especially when the subject is so emotional and vulnerable. However, we were blown away by just how many people wanted to offer their time and stories for this important cause.

From here, the title was born. Spot the Signs. With this and the materials gathered, it was over to the design team to work their magic. Stephen quickly created a simple yet incredibly effective logo for the campaign – the classic triangular warning sign on top of a person’s profile wearing a hard hat. Using a yellow and dark blue colourway, an impactful contrast was born, drawing the eye to this illustration and its accompanying text. Born from this logo was the design theme for the rest of the campaign, reflected in every post created and in the details within the video interviews.

What We Did

It’s time to talk

Next, it was time to reach out to charities. Norfolk and Waveney Mind , an incredible organization dedicated to supporting those struggling with their mental health, partnered with us and we got to work alongside the amazing Rachel. This gave us the opportunity to add their logo to our graphics and their contact details to our physical site signs, for those that needed to reach out but weren’t sure where to start.

Not everyone is comfortable talking to their peers about their problems, and finding calling professionals privately much easier. Everyone copes in their own way, so we wanted this campaign to support all possible routes of getting help.

What Came Next

A campaign with purpose

It was time to plan the structure of the campaign. It was decided that the central point of the timeline should be October 10th 2023, World Mental Health Day. This timeline included a few posts leading up to the World Mental Health Day post which would kick off the campaign officially.

Interviews and photos of real people within the construction industry would feature heavily, encouraging others to think about their mental health and the mental health of those around them. The stigma of acting tough and macho on-site needed to be broken, so featuring men in these segments was important.

What Came Next

Redefining strength in construction

A large part of social media marketing is understanding your audience. We created our content strategy for the campaign, planning the posts and organizing when and where was best to post so that the right audiences were reached. Instagram and LinkedIn were proven the best platforms for the job, so content was created to target the users of these social media spaces.

What Came Next

Making mental health visible

After this came the filming. We teamed up with the brilliant Meantime Media for the interviews which they directed, filmed and edited expertly. These fantastic pieces of media were the core messages of the campaign, and with them, we were able to finalize the project and line it up. September 26th saw the first post hit Instagram and LinkedIn, followed by a second before the official launch on October 10th.

We posted 5 video interviews interspersed with photos and graphics linking to accompanying blog posts over the course of the next month and a half, ending on November 27th.

If you enjoyed exploring this portfolio, we’d be delighted for you to share it with others. And if you’d like to see how we can deliver similar results for your business or project, please don’t hesitate to get in touch, we’d love to discuss what we could create together.

Ben pointing at the camera

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