Anthologie celebrates growth period with ten new business wins across impact clients

Hot on the heels of several high-impact project launches, Anthologie has been appointed by ten new organisations working across projects in the fields of health, science, ageing, plastics and community wellbeing – reinforcing the WA-based Impact Partner’s status as one of Australia’s leading partners for purpose-driven organisations.
The wins also come on the back of Anthologie’s recognition last year as Campaign Brief Western Australia’s 2024 Digital Agency of the Year.
“There’s a growing urgency across the purpose sector – organisations are under pressure to do more with less, while the problems they’re tackling are only getting more complex,” said Amy Sutton, Founder and Managing Director of Anthologie.
“We’re here to help build organisational resilience and capacity, tell more creative stories with great digital and design, and unlock the funding and support they need to keep showing up and making a difference.”
Anthologie’s service model is grounded in three pillars, Strategy & Resilience, Data & Tech and Design & Creativity, offering holistic support to purpose-driven clients navigating complex challenges.
“Anthologie has always stood for best-in-class design, data visualisation and digital expertise, but it’s been an exciting process to develop more in-house capabilities around creativity, storytelling, and particularly capacity-building for NFP clients around funding, fundraising and evidencing impact,” said Josh Edge, Executive Creative Director of Anthologie. “Ten straight wins, locally, nationally and internationally, means there’s a real urgency in the market to deliver on the kind of impact work that Anthologie specialises in.”
The new wins include:
City of Armadale: Co-designing the name and brand identity for Central Park, a new community precinct at the heart of the METRONET-driven Armadale Station redevelopment, celebrating local culture, heritage and connection through place-based storytelling.
ECU Nutrition and Health Innovation Research Institute: Co-designing an app to support cardiovascular research and heart healthy behaviour change.
iLA: Designing a new national mobile app that supports Australians aged 45+ to live well, with tailored health goals, local activity recommendations and motivational tracking.
Harry Perkins Institute of Medical Research: Strengthening internal culture and collaboration through a unifying vision and purpose, designed to build a stronger sense of shared identity and connect people across the organisation.
Plastic Free Foundation: Developing a storytelling framework to highlight local initiatives and organisational efforts to reduce plastic waste, launching with a pilot activation in the Philippines.
Richmind WA: Activating a bold new brand for mental health in WA with a community-driven campaign designed to spark awareness and action.
Transplant Australia: positioning this important charity to meet the lifetime needs of patients on the organ transplant journey through innovative brand strategy, digital and marketing engagement.
White Ribbon Australia: Creating a new narrative for White Ribbon Australia, and launching a national campaign that gives men and boys the tools to help end violence against women.
“The most exciting thing about this moment isn’t just the work – it’s the alignment,” said Lucy Newman, Partnerships Director at Anthologie. “We’re partnering with organisations who are serious about systems change, who understand the power of strategic storytelling, and who are actually invested in improving outcomes for the communities they serve. That’s where we do our best work.”
As a B Corp proudly based in Whadjuk Noongar Boodja / Perth, Anthologie’s team of 20 specialises in complex, multi-stakeholder projects across the impact sector. The agency works closely with researchers, policymakers, communities and funders to co-design impactful solutions that can sustainably scale.