Home » Hornsby Shire Council completes major recycling study

Hornsby Shire Council completes major recycling study

Hornsby Shire Council’s Waste Services Branch has just completed a comprehensive study into community attitudes to recycling which has culminated in a 40 page marketing strategy.

“One of the main reasons for undertaking this project was to find out why there appears to have been a plateauing of the diversion rate and to find out how to take community commitment to a higher level,” said Rob Holliday, Hornsby’s Manager Waste Management Division.

Following a tender process, Council engaged OWL Research and Marketing to undertake the entire program conducted in three stages.

“We decided to engage one company to undertake the whole program so there was consistency across the investigative stages and a link to the marketing outcome we were seeking,” Rob Holliday said. “OWL has worked with Council on other studies and also offers a marketing capability which gave them the edge.”

Stage One began with a self completion questionnaire mailed to 10,000 households. The 3,029 replies showed a high level of resident interest in recycling. Detailed analysis of these replies provided Council with statistical information about community attitudes and activities.

Nine focus groups were also conducted. Respondents discussed some of their concerns and provided a better insight into what people did or did not understand.

The Stage One report gave Council a new insight into community attitudes. The key message being more information and more education covering, what can be recycled, which bin do different items go in and why and what happens to all the recycled materials?

An aspect which needed more research was to better understand how different target groups reacted to various promotional elements. Stage Two comprised 13 focus groups, with respondents recruited according to age and lifestyle. Groups were conducted with senior citizens, families with young children, families with teenage children, unit dwellers, culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) residents, church groups, students at Hornsby TAFE, and students in primary schools.

A range of communications materials used by Hornsby Council were shown together with items sourced from other Councils. All were compared and evaluated for clarity of design, information value, usefulness, worth retaining (hung on the fridge) or discarded. Groups were then shown a range of new graphic designs developed by OWL’s marketing team, including logos, slogans, layouts for calendars, information brochures, stickers and other promotional items.

In additional to a full research report, OWL also provided Council with a 40 page marketing strategy recommending a new logo, a new motivational phrase (‘a call to action’), plus a unique new group of communicators (‘The Bin Crew’). Council is now reviewing the reports and deliberating over the many recommendations included in the marketing strategy. Readers will be kept informed in future editions on developments with this bold new, marketing initiative.

For further information contact Rob Holliday at Hornsby Shire on (02) 9847 4816 or John Clark at OWL Research and Marketing Pty Ltd on (02) 9489 8888.

Digital Editions


  • Fuel prices hurt country LGAs

    Fuel prices hurt country LGAs

    The fuel crisis is hitting remote, rural and regional communities hard, with farmers, freight carriers, tourism operators and local government all expressing concerns about the…

More News

  • Mayors call for waste levy

    Mayors call for waste levy

    Mayors across NSW have called for waste levy to soften the blow of fuel price increases. More than 60 Councils from across NSW have issued a call for the NSW…

  • Lismore four years on

    Lismore four years on

    Four years on: How Lismore is building back and setting a national benchmark. When the 2022 flood inundated Lismore, it was not simply another extreme weather event. It became Australia’s…

  • A golden celebration

    A golden celebration

    Cockburn Libraries will mark a major milestone in 2026 – 50 years of serving, supporting and connecting the community. Spearwood Library opened its doors on 23 March 1976 as one…

  • Local Governments vital for fuel supply

    Local Governments vital for fuel supply

    Fuel supply constraints and rising costs are putting councils and communities under increasing pressure across Australia, with implications for essential services and community infrastructure. The Australian Local Government Association is…

  • Nathan Daniell elected Mayor of Adelaide Hills Council

    Nathan Daniell elected Mayor of Adelaide Hills Council

    Adelaide Hills Council is pleased to advise that Nathan Daniell has formally been elected Mayor following confirmation of results from the supplementary election. Mr Daniell has served as a councillor…

  • Community mourns beloved former mayor

    Community mourns beloved former mayor

    The NSW local government sector is deeply saddened by the passing of former Lismore Mayor Jenny Dowell OAM, a widely respected and much-loved leader who dedicated her life to serving…

  • New-look reserve reopens

    New-look reserve reopens

    Toongabbie’s Sue Savage Reserve has reopened after a $4 million upgrade featuring a new skate park, BMX pump track, fitness equipment, an amenity building, park furniture, drainage upgrade, landscaping and…

  • Temora address housing shortage in tiny hamlet

    Temora address housing shortage in tiny hamlet

    Proposed Ariah Park Village Subdivision to Address Housing Shortage – Lots from $90-000 to $110,000 in the small picturesque hamlet. Temora Shire Council is investigating the delivery of a proposed…

  • Douglas Shire seeks renewal

    Douglas Shire seeks renewal

    Creative store opens in Mossman through empty spaces program. A new store and community art space has opened in Mossman thanks to a program designed to breathe new life into…

  • New youth and community centre for McLeay

    New youth and community centre for McLeay

    A new Youth and Community Centre planned for Macleay Island will service the needs of the growing community and will also be designed so it can support community recovery following…