1 / 25

Social, Ethical and Regulatory Issues in Advertising

Social, Ethical and Regulatory Issues in Advertising. Pro: Advertising is Informative Benefits & features Comparison data Product use info Market knowledge. Con: Advertising is Superficial Biased information Manipulated emotions Deceptive practices Little/no product

moe
Download Presentation

Social, Ethical and Regulatory Issues in Advertising

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. Social, Ethical and Regulatory Issues in Advertising

  2. Pro: Advertising is Informative Benefits & features Comparison data Product use info Market knowledge Con: Advertising is Superficial Biased information Manipulated emotions Deceptive practices Little/no product info Advertising Educates Consumers?

  3. Critics of advertising feel that advertising is superficial because many ads carry little actual product information. Do you think advertising is superficial?

  4. Pro:Ads Lower Product Costs Economies of scale Less overhead per unit Improves choice variety Promotes competition Con:Ads Waste Resources Inefficient process Shuffles fixed demand Lowers living standard Advertising Improves the Standard of Living

  5. Pro:Advertising Meets Needs E.g., food/health care Reflects society’s priorities Con:Advertising Creates Needs Consumers are seduced “Wants” become “needs” Advertising promotes materialism Ads define what’s hip; it shapes society Advertising Affects General Well-Being?

  6. Critics feel advertising promotes materialism

  7. Pro: (Liberating): Increased social sensitivity Women in management/ leadership roles Advertising is an art form Superbowl? Con: (Demeaning):Perpetuated stereotypes Women as homemakers/sex symbols Offensive, or in poor taste Anything to grab attention... Subliminal deception A common urban myth Is Advertising Demeaning or Liberating?

  8. Do you think this ad perpetuates stereotypes?

  9. Pro:Diversity & Affordability Primary source of revenue Sponsored programming Variety of media sources Competition is enhanced Con:Affected Programming Conflicts-of-interest Controversy is shunned Education is secondary Advertising Affects the Mass Media Positively/Negatively?

  10. The Ethical Aspects of Advertising Ethics are the moral standards against which behavior is judged. Key areas of debate regarding ethics and advertising are:

  11. The Ethical Aspects of Advertising • Truth in advertising • Advertising to children • Advertising controversial products

  12. Areas of Advertising Regulation • Deception and unfairness • Competitive issues • Advertising to children

  13. Key Regulatory Agencies • Government Regulation • Federal Trade Commission (FTC) • Wide range of regulatory programs and remedies • Federal Communications Commission (FCC) • Food and Drug Administration (FDA) • U.S. Postal Service • Securities and Exchange Commission • Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms

  14. The FTC • The government’s most powerful agency • Established in 1914 by the FTC Act • The Wheeler-Lea Amendment in 1938 gave the agency more power in regulating advertising deception

  15. The FTC’s Statement on Deception • There must be a representation, omission or practice that is likely to mislead the consumer • This representation, omission or practice must be judged from the perspective of a consumer acting reasonably in the circumstance • The representation, omission or practice must be a “material” one. Is the act/practice likely to affect the consumer’s conduct/decision w/regard to the product/service. If so, the practice is material and consumer injury is likely because consumers are likely have chosen differently

  16. Deceptive Practices • False Promises • Incomplete Description • Bait and Switch • Visual Distortions • False Testimonials • False Comparisons

  17. Competitive Issues • Vertical Cooperative Advertising • Comparative Advertising • Monopoly Power

  18. Advertising to Children • Children’s Television Act (1990) (Congress) • Children’s Advertising Review Unit (Council of Better Business Bureaus) • Major Television Networks

  19. The FTC’s Powers and Remedies • Advertising Substantiation Program • Consent Order • Cease and Desist Order • Affirmative Disclosure • Corrective Advertising

  20. Advertising Industry Self-Regulation Industry’s attempt to police itself

  21. Self-Regulation by the Advertising Industry • Motivated by: 1. fear of more stringent government regulations. 2. an interest in enhancing advertising effectiveness by discouraging misleading and deceptive practices 3. A general concern for public welfare

  22. Example • Distilled Spirits Council of the U.S.

  23. Advertising Industry Self-Regulation • The National Advertising Division/National Advertising Review Board (NAD/NARB) • Panel reviews complaints, hands off to the FTC • State and Local Better Business Bureaus • Counsels business, sends complaints to NAD/NARB • Advertising Agencies and Associations • Industry standards upheld by internal pressures • Media Organizations • Broadcasters monitor truth, fairness & taste

  24. Consumerism: Individuals or groups exerting regulatory power through boycotts and word of mouth Consumer Organizations: Consumer Federation of America (CFA) Consumers Union (Consumer Reports) Action for Children’s Television (ACT) Consumers as Regulatory Agents

More Related