New Rules for Social Media Influencers

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New Rules for Social Media Influencers

Last week, the Federal Trade Commission released guidelines for social media influencers clarifying when and how influencers must disclose sponsorships to their followers.

A social media influencer is someone with a dedicated group of followers who is viewed as an expert within their niche. When these influencers recommend specific brands, their followers tend to trust their advice.

In other words, an ardent follower of Kylie Jenner who sees Kylie’s Instagram post with a photo of herself wearing Adidas Stan Smith shoes (and hashtags identifying the product) is likely to buy a pair.

Many of her followers won’t care that Kylie is paid handsomely by Adidas to promote its products, but you’d likely feel deceived if you discovered that the trail shoes recommended by the host of your favorite fitness Facebook page, the bakery touted by a prominent local food-porn Instagrammer, the time-management app suggested by a productivity consultant on LinkedIn, and the cat litter praised by an adorable kitten on YouTube were paid advertisements.

The new guidelines restate previous rules in a way that is more specific to influencers.

Briefly, an influencer must properly disclose any financial, personal, family or employment relationship to a brand.

The reasoning is obvious. I might not be in such a rush to purchase the cat litter your cat is recommending on YouTube if I know that you’re employed by Fresh Step. Likewise, I might not be as eager to visit the bakery hashtagged in your croissant photo if I find out your wife and sister own the bakery.

Learning that your boyfriend is the developer of the time-management app you suggested will cause me to wonder if the app is as great as you say, and I definitely won’t trust your shoe recommendation as much if I’m aware that Saucony paid you $1,000 to endorse the shoes – or just gave you a free pair of shoes.

Of course, this is precisely why social media influencers would prefer not to disclose the relationship: an endorsement is more effective if an influencer’s followers believe the endorsement is an honest evaluation based on the influencer’s personal experience and knowledge.

This is why the FTC has developed guidelines to help influencers make appropriate disclosures so their followers will be able to more accurately weigh the value of their endorsements.

When to Disclose

Influencers should disclose any financial, employment, personal, or family relationship with a brand. Receipt of free or discounted products or services should always be disclosed, even if you weren’t asked to mention that product or service.

You must disclose the relationship even if you think your followers already know, and even if you think your evaluations are unbiased.

The guidelines specifically say that tags, likes, pins, and similar ways of showing you like a brand or product are endorsements too.

How to Disclose

Disclosures must be hard to miss. They should appear with the endorsement message, not just on a profile or “about” page or at the end of posts or videos. The guidelines provide more information about where disclosures should appear on some specific social media platforms.

Disclosures must be in clear, simple language. You should also avoid abbreviations when possible.

Don’t Mislead

The guidelines remind influencers that they can’t legally talk about their experiences with products they’ve never tried and that if they did try a product and hated it, they can’t say they liked it.
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Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions about these guidelines or about FTC guidelines for companies who compensate social media influencers and use testimonials in their advertising.

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By | 2019-12-12T23:46:30+00:00 November 15th, 2019|Categories: Articles|Comments Off on New Rules for Social Media Influencers