Compliance Enablement As the eSafety Commissioner already offers a self-assessment tool to determine coverage under online safety law, there is a clear opportunity to license or integrate an enhanced compliance platform. This could include vendor risk assessments, automated remediation checklists, and reporting dashboards for regulators and industry partners, enabling faster vendor onboarding and ongoing compliance across jurisdictions.
Education Platform With active Schools' Hub and sport resources, there is potential to expand into a national learning platform for educators, coaches, and students. Opportunities include enterprise LMS licenses, ready-to-use digital safety curricula, multilingual content, analytics on uptake and outcomes, and professional development programs tailored to schools, clubs, and sporting bodies.
International Collaboration The memorandum of understanding with international partners signals a pathway for cross-border programs. A scalable platform governance and moderation toolkit, combined with compliance training and joint incident response workflows, could be offered as a regional or global service to regulators, platforms, and industry bodies.
Industry Partnerships The existing sport sector engagement suggests a target market among sporting codes, leagues, and media partners. Sales opportunities include bespoke online safety training, code-of-conduct resources, moderation tooling, and incident response playbooks that align with sport integrity and broadcasting requirements.
Data Analytics Given the technology stack and focus on monitoring compliance, there is demand for data-driven safety insights. A cloud-based analytics and reporting solution covering incident trends, risk scoring, and governance metrics, plus integration with Azure Data Factory and existing systems, would support eSafety’s mandate while offering scalable services to partners.