Your Advertising Legal Responsibility

You are in business and now need to develop marketing materials and a marketing and advertising campaign. There are rules that must be followed when marketing your services and products. Below are snippets of useful information from the Bureau of Consumer Protection Business Center under the Federal Trade Commission.

Whether a business is an established global brand or a start-up, effective advertising and marketing can be the key to its success.  All businesses have a legal responsibility to ensure that advertising is truthful and not deceptive. No matter where an ad appears – on the Internet, on the radio or television, in newspapers and magazines, in the mail, or on billboards or buses – the same truth-in-advertising standard applies.  Additional standards apply if you use telemarketing in your promotional efforts.

Advertising and Marketing Basics

Under the law, claims in advertisements must be truthful, cannot be deceptive or unfair, and must be evidence-based. For some specialized products or services, additional rules may apply.

Children

If you advertise directly to children or market kid-related products to their parents, it is important to comply with truth-in-advertising standards.  (Questions about kids’ privacy? Check out the FTC’s resources about COPPA, the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act.)

Endorsements

Do you use endorsements or testimonials in your marketing? Do they meet the standards of the FTC Act and the Endorsement Guides?  Find out more by consulting FTC compliance resources.

Environmental Marketing

Companies are offering consumers an ever-growing assortment of “green” options. Whether your environmental claims are about the product or the packaging, you will need competent and reliable scientific evidence to support what you say. Find out more by consulting the FTC’s revised Green Guides.  Have you spotted what you think might be a deceptive claim or practice? Contact the FTC at green@ftc.gov.

Health Claims

Companies must support their advertising claims with solid proof. This is especially true for businesses that market food, over-the-counter drugs, dietary supplements, contact lenses, and other health-related products.

Made in the USA

Do you promote your products as “Made in the USA?” Under the law, some products must disclose U.S. content. For others, manufacturers and marketers who choose to make claims about the amount of U.S. content must comply with the FTC’s Made in the USA policy.  Is your company up-to-date on what’s required?

Online Advertising and Marketing

The Internet connects marketers to customers across the country and around the world. If you’re thinking about advertising online, remember the rules and guidelines that protect consumers also help businesses by maintaining the credibility of the Internet as an advertising medium.

Do you have questions about children’s online privacy? Read about the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act.

Telemarketing

The FTC’s Telemarketing Sales Rule helps protect consumers from fraudulent telemarketing calls and gives them certain protections under the National Do Not Call Registry. Companies must be familiar with rules banning most forms of robocalling.  If you or someone working on your behalf is telemarketing products or services, know the dos and don’ts before planning your strategy.

Visit their website for more in depth information on each area – http://business.ftc.gov/advertising-and-marketing.

Learn from a 4-Year-Old How to Get What You Want!

I recently read a blog written by Jarom Adair on CopyBlogger about how persuasive his four-year-old son was at getting what he wanted when he wanted it and even when he really didn’t know he wanted it. I have children and I know exactly what he’s talking about.

Jarom went on to tell a story of how his son got a woman in the grocery store to open a bag of chips for him that she hadn’t even paid for yet. Another story he shared was how he picked a stranger at a sporting event and — before Jarom could intervene — his son got the guy to buy him a large bag of Gummy LifeSavers from a vending machine.

As Jarom put it, his son was that skilled at “the art of persuasion.” So, have you ever had a bad period where no one was calling… no one emailed… no one ordered, just things were so slow even a snail could beat you? Well, you need to brush up on your persuasion skills. Listed below are nine things Jarom indicated as ways to get people to do what you want them to do – taught to him by his son.

  • The art of ask
  • Find the right angle
  • Break the entire process down into manageable steps
  • Emulate successful strategies
  • Collect compliments
  • Use rich language
  • Paint vivid pictures for your readers
  • Show them some love
  • Tell them your hopes

Visit his blog to read the full details here.