Journalist Tracey Spicer has partnered with 30 celebrity ambassadors to launch a not-for-profit dedicated to putting a stop to sexual harassment in Aussie workplaces.

Spicer, together with such big-name celebrities as actress Deborah Mailman and singer Missy Higgins, announced NOW Australia's launch in a video yesterday .

"NOW is a non-partisan coalition committed to ending industrial and systemic sexual harassment for all people in Australia," Spicer said.

The group is seeking to raise $250,000 in funds to setup education services as well as counselling, legal support and media representation services for harassment survivors.

Veteran journalist Tracie Spicer is spearheading not-for-profit NOW. (Vimeo/NOW Australia) (Vimeo/NOW Australia)

Missy Higgins is one of 30 celebrities speaking in support of the initiative. (Vimeo/NOW Australia) (Vimeo/NOW Australia)

It follows a callout by Spicer in October last year for survivors to share their stories, leading to more than 1600 people contacting her from across a range of industries and backgrounds.

"(NOW is) the place people can have that crucial first conversation about what they're going through," Ms Spicer told the ABC .

"By connecting them to the support and advice they need, we're also providing the strategies to eliminate sexual harassment in the workplace for the next generation."

A survey conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics in 2016 found one in two women and one in four men had experienced sexual harassment during their lives.