Written for the Communications and Design Manager. A cover letter, a JD-by-JD fit map that names both my strengths and my growth edges, a quick respectful read of your public comms, and my CV.
I'm applying for the Communications and Media Officer role because the mission — saving lives and eliminating serious road trauma through evidence-based advocacy, since 1988 — is exactly the kind of work I want my communications craft pointed at. I built this hub before applying so you can judge my comms thinking directly, not from a folio of screenshots.
Let me be straight about who I am, because the Rind Standard I work to starts with honesty. I'm a content and digital communicator, not a twenty-year senior PR practitioner. What I do every day maps closely to your "what you'll be doing": I build, schedule and maintain social media content across platforms, run member email in Mailchimp-style tools, write posts to a marketing timetable, monitor engagement and respond to enquiries, and coordinate promotion for events — all kept on-brand and on-message. I work as a fast, organised one-person studio with an AI-accelerated workflow, and I review everything for accuracy before it goes out. Door 02 of this hub is a working communications & social engine I built for road-safety comms; Door 03 is a conference + awards campaign concept. Both are live — read the craft, then decide.
What I bring that the PD leans on hardest: evidence-first discipline. Years of Australian government service — across four federal agencies and Revenue NSW — trained me to ship nothing without a verifiable source and to keep every output accurate, consistent and on-brand. For an organisation whose authority rests on research and the Journal of Road Safety, that temperament matters. I'm also genuinely comfortable, remote-first, with Microsoft 365 and SharePoint, digital systems generally, and providing technical support for online meetings and webinars.
Where I'd lean on you: senior media relations — building a press contact book and handling journalist interviews at depth — is a growth edge for me, and the PD already pairs those tasks with your support, which suits how I'd ramp. Large-scale Awards Gala logistics with the conference PCO is something I'd grow into with guidance rather than overstate. I've named both openly in the fit map below rather than bluff them.
I'm available immediately, Melbourne-based with a proper home office, comfortable fully remote, and happy to travel for the Australasian Road Safety Conference and the in-person staff planning days. I'd welcome fifteen minutes to walk you through this hub.
Khalid Rind · NeuraNest AI · Melbourne (remote)
info@khalidrind.io · +61 493 348 617 · khalidrind.io
Mapped honestly against the PD's responsibilities and capabilities. Navy = a clear strength. Amber = where I'd grow into it or lean on the Comms & Design Manager. No point is hidden.
From a respectful look at ACRS's public profile on 3 June 2026 — framed as a communicator's read, not a critique. The organisation already does a lot right; these are where a dedicated comms officer adds compounding value.
Journal of Road Safety, policy advocacy and the Australasian Road Safety Conference. That's a comms goldmine: every paper, finding and session is a story waiting to be made shareable for members and the public without diluting the rigour.Happy to walk the panel through this hub in 15 minutes online — or reply by email and we'll find a time that suits a remote team.
Email me →