| MLM Consultant ... MLM Consulting
FTC Guidelines on
Endorsements and Testimonials
Resource Center
www.mlmlegal.com
© Jeffrey Babener
Introduction and Welcome
FTC Guidelines on Endorsements and Testimonials
Resource Center
Welcome to the
MLMLegal.Com Resource Center regarding the FTC Guidelines on
Endorsements and Testimonials. In this Center will be found significant and
detailed resource information on the FTC Guidelines as they impact MLM,
Direct Selling, Network Marketing and Party Plan. Included in the ongoing
updates are analysis and source material relating to the FTC Advertising
Guide adoptions on endorsements and testimonials by celebrities and
connected parties. Because MLM, Network Marketing and Direct Selling
distributors are "connected parties," their postings in ads, blogs, social
networking sites, etc. will be subject to review under the updated FTC
Guide.
A brief excerpt from the linked article, FTC
Guidelines on Endorsements and Testimonials: Analysis, by Jeffrey Babener,
editor of www.mlmlegal.com, which
includes suggested alternative paragraphs for Company Polices, will indicate
the issues and challenges for MLM, Direct Selling, Network Marketing and
Party Plan companies in years to come:
On October 5, 2009, the Federal Trade Commission
published a notice that it is adopting revised Guides Concerning the Use
of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising. The revised Guide
basically updates the earlier Guide with particular attention to the use
of endorsements, and testimonials on blogs, in word-of-mouth advertising
campaigns and on new media platforms, and became effective December 1,
2009.
The new "Guide" will impact direct selling, network
marketing, MLM and party plan companies, but there is overlap from
previous FTC enforcement. The Guide does not change the duties of the
company in ads that make earnings claims or product claims. If earnings
claims are made, the FTC has long ago contended that such claims were
deceptive unless accompanied by average earnings disclosures. If product
performance claims were made, the FTC demanded that the company be able to
substantiate the claims and to disclose expected typical results of
consumers of the product or service.
The new "guide" rules are applicable to claims by
celebrity endorsers, distributors, users or, in the less frequent occasion
of product performance claims by a consumer who has some type of
affiliation with the company. As to earnings claims, the FTC has long
contended that any distributor earnings claims, testimonials or
hypothetical projections be accompanied by references to average earnings
disclosures prepared by the company. Many leading companies already comply
in this regard. The new rules, however, now add a new responsibility to
distributor claims about product performance. If a distributor makes a
claim about a personal experience or other expected performance experience
from the product or service, in any type of media, including social
networking media, the distributor is now obliged to disclose his or her
connection with the company and to also disclose information that fairly
represents the expected performance results for the typical consumer. The
previous "safe harbor," of merely disclosing that "Typical Results May
Vary," has been removed by the new FTC Guide and replaced by a requirement
of disclosure of "expected results for the typical consumer," a much more
onerous burden on the endorser, giver of the testimonial or company that
is promoted. This FTC demand is similar to its existing policy regarding
earnings claims. And, as to liability, both the individual endorser or
individual providing the testimonial and the company are liable for
failure to provide disclosure of connection and typical results
expectations. Above and beyond actual compliance with the new "guide"
rules, companies, to avoid liability, will face a new challenge of
monitoring a sales force with potential hundreds of thousands or millions
of independent distributors as those distributors make product performance
claims in various media.
Since the new "guide" rules will impact virtually
all product and service marketing activity in the U.S., it is likely that
years will pass before regulatory actions and cases will give clear
guidance to enforcement policy and interpretation of the new FTC
Guidelines.
With respect to the FTC Guidelines, several
observations are on point with respect to the impact on direct selling,
network marketing, MLM and party plans programs:
- It is important to note that the Guidelines are
neither laws, regulations, administrative rulings, legislative or court
authority, nor do they have the force of law. The Guidelines are just
that, i.e., guidelines that represent the FTC’s administrative
interpretation that asserts the FTC’s position with respect to
advertiser compliance with the FTC Act. The FTC recognizes that it will
have the burden of proving deceptive activity in any law enforcement
action.
The FTC makes this point clear in its own words and
news release of October 5, 2009 regarding the updated Guides:
The Guides are administrative interpretations of the law intended to
help advertisers comply with the Federal Trade Commission Act; they are
not binding law themselves. In any law enforcement action challenging
the allegedly deceptive use of testimonials or endorsements, the
Commission would have the burden of proving that the challenged conduct
violates the FTC Act.
- Although the
Guides may seem more appropriate in the conventional advertising context
of television, radio, print or internet media that is organized and
sponsored by a central company advertiser, the Guide rules, if and when
applied to individual direct selling distributor testimonials, in the
course of individual distributor promotion, are potentially quite
troubling and over burdensome to direct selling companies. Disclosure of
connection or relationship with the direct selling company is not an
issue. However, the requirement of posting companion "typical results
surveys" in many or most instances is overkill that cannot possibly
monitor product testimonials by millions of independent distributors.
- The assumption that the average reasonable
consumer will be unduly swayed to buy product by an individual distributor,
providing an honest testimonial that he or she "lost 10 pounds in a month"
on company products or "saved $10 on their home heating bill or telephone
bill," does not accord sufficient respect to the intelligence and market
decision making of the average reasonable consumer. The potential influence
of one distributor’s experience, posted on a social networking site, such as Facebook, is likely overrated. It has long been recognized that the
reference to a pastry as a Danish is not understood by the average
reasonable consumer as a product imported from Denmark. The stronger case
can be made for the influence of a famous celebrity. As the administrative
enforcement case law develops, hopefully some distinction can be made
between the product testimonial of a distributor and the testimonial or
endorsement of a celebrity. In addition, perhaps distinctions may develop as
to the extent of such testimonials, i.e. "I lost 10 pounds in a month" vs.
"I lost 10 pounds in a day."
- The Guide would seemingly impose liability on the
direct selling company for the promotional testimonials of its independent
contractor distributors. In an industry where direct selling companies
utilize a network of millions of "amateur" home-based independent contractor
distributors, the task of monitoring all media, including social networking
and blogs, becomes a virtually impossible task and burden. Although it is
understandable that the company should play a responsible role in enforcing
the ultimate adjudicated rules and standards, imposing liability in this
context, at least prior to an adjudication that renders a clear defining
standard, seems quite unfair.
- Direct selling, network marketing, MLM and party plan
companies, faced with the new Guides, which have not yet been interpreted
and ruled upon in court or administrative adjudication proceedings, will
need to explore their own compliance responsive action ranging from "wait
and see" to aggressive adoption of rules, training, monitoring and
enforcement. On a spectrum of action, the following may be under
consideration by companies, which must make their own policy risk decisions:
- Since the Guides are just that,
i.e., guides, a company may wish to monitor the regulatory dialogue,
enforcement action and litigation in this area to understand the specific
impact on instances involving direct selling distributor testimonials.
Presumably, evolving case decisions will be based on "case by case" facts,
and expected standards will develop for fact sensitive scenarios. For
instance, and hopefully, the burden of disclosure in a corporate sponsor
advertisement featuring a well-known celebrity may be deemed to be much
more stringent than an isolated testimonial of performance use by an
independent home-based business direct selling distributor at a blog site
or social networking site. At the very least, the company would advise
distributors, when making testimonials about product experience, to
disclose their company affiliation, to be honest in their statements and
to speak about product performance experience in a more general
satisfaction manner than specifics that imply claims. An additional
paragraph to policies might provide:
A distributor that provides a product experience
testimonial, in any medium should use care to disclose affiliation with the
company, be honest in their testimonial personal experience, assert that
they are not claiming that their experience is the typical results
experience of potential consumers.
Moving along the spectrum from "do nothing" to "be
honest" would be a policy decision to an aggressive compliance policy
paragraph, that must be, at the very least, considered among the choices of
policy risk decision making, even if viewed as an unattractive alternative:
A distributor shall not provide a specific product
experience testimonial, in any medium, unless the distributor discloses
affiliation with the company, is honest and sincere in the specific product
experience testimonial and unless the distributor discloses "typical product
results expectations data and information for consumers" as researched and
published by the company.
It is expected that companies and their compliance
departments will develop their own unique approaches to dealing with the new
rules, ranging from adoption of new policies, guidelines, education,
monitoring and enforcement. Tune in to www.mlmlegal.com for ongoing updates
and analysis.
Links to Resources:
FTC Guidelines Endorsements and Testimonials: Detailed
Analysis
FTC News Release on Endorsements and Testimonials
FTC Complete
Guidelines Release
FTC Short Version Guidelines Release
FTC Examples of
Material Connection
FTC Regulation of Advertising
|