The federal government will reform referendum laws as it looks to progress Indigenous constitutional recognition.
Indigenous Australians Minister Linda Burney says the laws are out of date by not incorporating digital communications.
Currently, laws rely on voters being sent a printed pamphlet detailing the yes and no cases for a proposed change.
Ms Burney says the government is looking at ways the laws can be "refreshed" as it moves ahead to establish a constitutionally-enshrined Indigenous voice to parliament.
The minister said she was encouraged by new polling showing solid support for the voice.
The Resolve Political Monitor poll, conducted for the Sydney Morning Herald and Age newspapers, found 64 per cent approval for the draft wording of the voice.
Support was weakest in Queensland (59 per cent) and strongest in Tasmania (73 per cent).
The poll came as an emotive new television advertisement - the History Is Calling campaign - was launched on Monday by the architects of the Uluru statement, to encourage Australians to vote for constitutional change.
It is the first TV ad launched by advocates after Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced a referendum would be held in this term of parliament.
The ad stars Pitjantjatjara and Nyungar man Trevor Jamieson, who tells a group of children sitting around a campfire in the desert how everyday Australians helped First Nations people achieve a voice to parliament.
It depicts conversations between tradies, rugby players, dancers and a family sitting around a kitchen table.
Ms Burney said the poll result was "great news" and praised the advertising campaign as "extraordinary".
"It says that Australians believe in fairness and decency and understand that things have to improve for First Nations people," she told ABC radio on Monday.
The government has proposed adding three sentences to the constitution outlining the creation of a body which would represent Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.
It would advise parliament and the government on matters relating to Indigenous people but would be "subservient" to legislation.
The government is working with First Nations leaders to determine the timing for a successful referendum and the public information needed for it to pass.
Asked why a voice was needed when Indigenous people could be consulted without it, Ms Burney said it would be a "permanent voice entrenched in the constitution".
"It will be a voice that will advise the parliament, not just government, but the parliament," she said.
"So there will be a point of advice, consultation, negotiation, that people are aware of - it won't be the sort of scattergun approach that sometimes can happen."
But Indigenous coalition senator Jacinta Price said the government had failed to consult with the whole community, branding the voice as "bureaucracy".
"Are they saying that they can only consult with Indigenous Australians if they have a voice to parliament?" she said.
Senator Price said the voice would be "enshrining a bureaucracy, a transfer of power, to an industry that's been responsible for Indigenous disadvantage for decades and done nothing".