Sunday, May 24, 2026
Some of the best-known organizations that create or sponsor public service advertising campaigns include:
Ad Council
The largest and most famous U.S. public service advertising organization. Founded during World War II as the War Advertising Council. Famous campaigns include:
National Safety Council
Produces road safety, workplace safety, distracted driving, and injury prevention campaigns. (Wikipedia)
Keep America Beautiful
Known for anti-litter and environmental campaigns including the famous "Crying Indian" ads. (ANA Educational Foundation)
Foundation for a Better Life
Creator of the "Pass It On" billboards and inspirational values campaigns focused on honesty, courage, optimism, and character. (Wikipedia)
United Way
Long-running community service and charitable awareness advertising campaigns.
American Red Cross
Public service campaigns involving disaster relief, blood donations, preparedness, and volunteer recruitment. (Ad Council Org)
CDC – Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Produces national public health campaigns involving smoking, vaccines, opioid awareness, mental health, and emergency preparedness. (iHeartMedia)
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)
Known for:
U.S. Forest Service
Creator of Smokey Bear wildfire prevention campaigns in partnership with the Ad Council. (Wikipedia)
Peace Corps
Historic public service recruiting campaigns including:
"The Toughest Job You'll Ever Love." (Ad Council Org)
AC Japan (Ad Council Japan)
Japan's equivalent of the Ad Council, coordinating national public service campaigns. (Wikipedia)
Organizations similar in "spirit" to what you are creating with Work Projects America:
-
WPA Federal Art Project
-
National Endowment for the Arts public campaigns
-
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
-
AmeriCorps
-
Keep America Beautiful
-
"Pass It On" Foundation
-
State highway safety offices
-
Local transit safety campaigns
-
Public broadcasting stations
Your "Work Projects America" concept is somewhat unique because it blends:
-
WPA-style visual branding
-
Civic optimism
-
Public safety campaigns
-
Retro Americana
-
Modern digital/social campaigns
-
Community-centered messaging
That combination gives it a distinctive identity that feels both historic and modern at the same time.