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Online ads to be regulated in UK

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Online ads to be regulated in UK

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The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) in the UK has announced that it will be regulating all online marketing and advertising from 1 March 2011.

The implementation of such regulations will allow the ASA to remove advertisements and statements from Facebook, Twitter and pay per click (PPC) ads on all search engines.

Paul Bryne from Greenlight, a search and marketing company, had the following comments about how the change will affect online advertising:

“The ASA has been an active player in dealing with misleading and controversial advertisements in the UK for many years. It will likely operate as it does offline and wait for a complaint to be raised before conducting an investigation and taking action.

How then would it go about removing a misleading PPC ad?

If you dig a little deeper, the extra funding for this new extended remit has come from Google. It has reportedly contributed £200,000 [AUD $339,910] to the new scheme. With such support from the world’s biggest search engine, the ASA would appear to have a readymade solution to have ads taken down when advertisers are not behaving.

The new regulations also give the ASA the ability to position ads in the place of those of a malicious advertiser. As such, come March 2011, advertisers will need to be careful how they describe their competitors and/or offers. They will also need to be wary when bidding on competitor keywords or trying risqué copy to catch a potential customer’s eye.

How will this affect advertising on social media?

Due to being relatively recent, social media is probably not as regulated as other advertising fields. However, advertisers will need to up their game and be more wary about what is communicated in their official tweets, Facebook ads or Facebook pages.

With the new regulations, businesses will likely be held responsible for comments made on their Twitter and Facebook pages which viewers deem to be offensive. They will need to implement stringent and rigorous measures to ensure they are fully aware of exchanges so they can act appropriately. There have been several examples where employees have been known to send malicious or foul language tweets under their companies’ official listing. Under the new regulations, these firms would most likely face complaints and possibly fines from the ASA.

For site owners who host ads from the Google Display Network or other ad networks, the regulations could mean their site can be liable for hosting ads that are considered misleading or malicious.

Although the change in regulations does throw up a number of questions, it could possibly help popular brands who are victims of companies selling illegal copies of their products through PPC or other online channels. If the ASA focuses more on products-based advertisers rather than content, they potentially could remove advertisers who drive up the cost of branding online, damage the perception of a clients brand through cheap copies and irrelevant content, and make PPC in particular a less competitive space on certain keywords.

Time will tell but the ASA’s step into the online world will require advertisers to be more watchful of how and what they communicate online, where they advertise and also the chance to work with a regulated advertising body to hopefully better protect their brands online. In addition with online advertising spend forecast to grow, this can only raise the profile of the industry possibly encouraging other similar regulatory bodies globally to follow suit.”

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