Posts Tagged ‘guidelines’

Blogola: Are Product Reviews in Danger?

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

picture If you are thinking about buying something online, one of your first steps in evaluating the product might be to see what kind of reviews the product has received. But what if the reviewer was paid to give a favorable review? This is a practice that clearly has some troubling implications. That’s why the FTC recently addressed this practice in the Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising (yes, this is the same proposal that would require evidence of typicality for some testimonials).

But, consider this: You want your product to appear on reviews because you believe it will help increase the visibility of the product or brand. You send a free sample to a well-known blogger and you explicitly tell them they should be neutral in their review and should disclose that they received the product for free. Under the FTC’s proposed changes you may have liability. If on the same day you also send your product to a product reviewer for a publication without any agreement requiring disclosure, and they do not disclose that they received the product for free, you do not have liability!

Product reviews online come in many forms. In some contexts consumers will expect that the product was given to the reviewer as a free sample. If a college student reviews a new game console every week, would anyone really think that he or she is spending thousands of dollars a month to share friendly advice? This is a complicated issue deserving careful analysis; the FTC must consider the nuances of product reviews before adding new regulations for bloggers.

Get involved! You can learn more and do something about these proposed changes here.

For more information on ERA’s government affairs efforts, click here.

Tomi Turner is ERA’s legislative manager.