1 / 21

Online advertising standards Dr Oliver Gray 26 October 2004

Online advertising standards Dr Oliver Gray 26 October 2004. To discuss today …. The problems and challenges ICC & EASA The new ICC guidelines Enforcement Conclusions. Problems and challenges 1. New media: Internet, SMS, MMS New techniques: Blogs, Wiki, Split Screen

Download Presentation

Online advertising standards Dr Oliver Gray 26 October 2004

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Online advertising standards Dr Oliver Gray 26 October 2004

  2. To discuss today… • The problems and challenges • ICC & EASA • The new ICC guidelines • Enforcement • Conclusions

  3. Problems and challenges 1 • New media: Internet, SMS, MMS • New techniques: Blogs, Wiki, Split Screen • New actors: internet agencies • Constant change blurring traditional divisions • Law not able to keep up • Outside advertising standards remit? • Enforcement not yet adapted

  4. Problems and challenges 2 • Direct interface consumer -> advertiser • Privacy • Data collection • New technologies aimed at, used by and understood by young people • Increased media and commercial crowding • An industry developed to offer the solution

  5. From challenge to opportunity • Industry: • Confusion! • Consumers: • Uncertain, doubtful • Confidence and trust • undermined • Solution: • ‘Light touch’ regulation • SR seen as business solution • SR works within framework • of law i.e. EU e-commerce • & TVWF directives

  6. ICC and EASA • Commission on Marketing & Advertising: • 1996: ICC guidelines for Internet • 1998: Internet guidelines revised Instigated by: • Advertising industry • New actors (service providers, software companies, telecoms, online media)

  7. EASA work • Encourages advertising standards bodies (ASBs) to adopt ICC internet guidelines • Studies and makes recommendations on enforcement (esp. with country of origin) • ASBs took internet advertising into their remit with reservations • Trustmark schemes

  8. New ICC guidelines • No longer just internet: updated to include telecoms, internet and TV • Major business associations involved: WFA, EACA, FEDMA, EGTA, ESOMAR, EASA, USCIB, IAB • FEDMA & EGTA SR codes consulted • Updated by ICC Task Force Code Revision • Approval Nov 2004, launch 2 Dec 2004 Visit www.iccwbo.org

  9. Why electronic media guidelines? • Enhance consumer confidence in electronic media • Ensure an adequate level of privacy • Honour consumer preferences Better business

  10. Basic principles of guidelines Advertisers must: • Be aware of applicable laws • Respect the spirit and letter of the rules Communications must: • Be legal, decent, honest & truthful • Not impair public confidence • Respect the rules in the ‘country of origin’

  11. Guidelines’ scope • Disclosure of advertiser’s identity • Clarity for consumer of cost of communications • Respect for public groups • Data protection and privacy • Unsolicited messages • Honouring consumer preferences • Interfering with consumer’s usage • Advertising to children • Respect for sensitivities of global audiences • Ultimate responsibility

  12. Example: Advertising to children

  13. Example: Responsibility • Shared by all parties • Commensurate with their role in ad process • Prime responsibility is on advertiser • Clauses in contracts re: adhering to rules and respecting decisions

  14. Enforcement • Invest in technology and training: • SMS/MMS hotlines • Online complaint forms • Build up cross-border expertise • Link with new enforcement communities • International networks • Establish best practice

  15. EASA network • 27 advertising standards bodies • 13 European industry bodies • Advertisers • Agencies • Media

  16. Internet advertising statistics 2002: 1,843 (4% of total) 2003: 3,428 (8% of total) Increase: +1,585 (86%) • Germany: Increase of 500 complaints • UK: Increase of approx 1,050 complaints

  17. Cross-border example: Ganter shoes • 2002:Complaint from UK Royal Household re: unapproved use of the Queen’s image • Site based in Germany, German rules stipulate subject’s approval • Image removed

  18. Cross-border example: Ganter shoes • Site no longer has any such images

  19. Companies! Stop, look and listen! • Are your ads legal, decent honest and truthful? • Have you consulted the ICC rules? • Are you aware of local applicable advertising standards rules? • Have you included a responsibility clause in your agency contract? • Are your agencies aware of this? • Is it clear to the consumer what rules apply and where to go if there is a problem? • Have you honoured their preferences?

  20. Conclusion 1 • We live in a virtual universe • Uncertainty principle: “The more precisely the position is determined, the less precisely the momentum is known in this instant, and vice versa.” (Heisenberg)

  21. Conclusion 2 • ICC provides a flexible and dynamic framework for business to conduct responsible marketing communications • Confidence will be built • Education and training of new actors Prevention is better than cure (Erasmus)

More Related