Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

ETHICAL ADVERTISIN­G

- By Muqaddasa Wahid

When it comes to advertisin­g, one hardly thinks about their psychologi­cal effect, environmen­tal impact or how they can affect people’s health and daily lives. But all these are embodied in the ethics of advertisin­g. Sri Lanka’s rapidly evolving advertisin­g sector has sometimes faced public outrage for promoting unethical content. But ethical and responsibl­e advertisin­g in Sri Lanka has largely escaped significan­t attention. But in neighbouri­ng countries like India, Pakistan, Nepal and countries like the US and the UK, there has been much debate and discussion on the topic. In this backdrop, spoke to some of the advertisin­g profession­als on the issue. “DEPENDS ON THE CLIENT” - SHABEEB MUZAMMIL

Shabeeb Muzammil, Associate Creative Director at LOOPS Solutions, said there were no legal or ethical guidelines for advertisin­g in Sri Lanka, but only certain regulation­s. “In Sri Lanka, one cannot advertise certain medicines, cigarettes and alcohol,” he said. Ethics, meanwhile, mostly depended on the client. “While most advertisin­g ethics stem from societal and cultural norms, the ethical side of advertisin­g is mostly up to the client. The job of the agency is to recommend the best manner to market the product, keeping in mind business ethics and sustainabi­lity. But the client makes the final call,” he said.

“GREY AREA” - DILEEPA ABEYSEKERA

With years of experience in the field, Dileepa Abeysekera said ethical advertisin­g revolved around social norms. While highlighti­ng the lack of laws, he said the Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporatio­n (SLRC) Code of Advertisin­g Standards and Practice had guidelines related to child viewers and child actors in commercial­s. “But over time, due to the lack of enforceabi­lity, the industry has gradually stopped adhering to the code,” Mr. Abeysekera said and pointed out that there were regulation­s for food, pesticides and medicines. “Usually, the Food Advertisin­g Committee must approve the script. Sometimes the committee checks the advertisem­ent to ensure there is no breach of conduct or misinforma­tion,” he said.

Mr. Abeysekara called for an effective regulatory mechanism and clear guidelines for agencies and clients. “Ethical advertisin­g is currently a grey area in Sri Lanka. Enforceabl­e regulation­s will make it clearer for clients and agencies to understand what is right and wrong,” he said adding that Sri Lanka’s attitude towards Intellectu­al Property (IP) law and copyright law should also change. “As a country, we still don’t recognize IP laws and we blatantly violate them without realizing it.”

Commenting on the reasons for unethical advertisin­g, Mr. Abeysekera said people tended to push the limits to be innovative. “These innovative ideas, and going beyond limits, can sometimes cause advertisem­ents to be unethical and hurt societal sentiments. When agencies realize the idea is harmful, they tend to take it down. But if the client wants it up, the agency has no choice but to keep it,” he said and added that some advertisin­g campaigns had been taken down due to sheer public pressure. Mr. Abeysekera said creators should be mindful of the general public and target audience. “Creators should be mindful of their level of manipulati­on in advertisem­ents. It is acceptable to represent a situation, but unacceptab­le to excessivel­y manipulate it,” he said.

Recalling some instances of unethical advertisin­g, he said: “During and after the civil war, the advertisin­g industry promoted the sentiments of only one community, and not the other. People forgot about the ads, but their psychologi­cal impact became apparent some years later. Advertisem­ents shouldn’t be skewed only towards the sentiments of one community, but rather should bring out the whole perspectiv­e.” Mr. Abeysekera said if both the advertisin­g and media industries had a regulatory code of ethics, the media too could reject unethical ads.

“IAA MONITORS ETHICAL ADVERTISIN­G” – LAILA GUNASEKERE

Past President and Member of the Board of Internatio­nal Advertisin­g Associatio­n (IAA), Laila Gunesekere said ethical advertisin­g was in the DNA of any good agency. “At IAA, we monitor ethical advertisin­g. We do not set down rules. But ethics is something we take for granted. Something we follow every day,” she said. Anyone can complain to the IAA on a breach in ethical boundaries. “We will evaluate the complaint, and if it crosses ethical boundaries, we advise the agency to remove the ad,” Ms. Gunesekere said. Gender, racial and religious bias constitute a breach of ethical advertisin­g, but it’s rare to see ads promoting such biases. “We do not at any stage run down a competitor. And as an industry, I feel we’re fairly ethical,” she said. “Sri Lankan consumers are active consumers. This helps the industry uphold ethical standards as advertiser­s and clients fear backlash.”

“LACK OF DATA PROTECTION AND PRIVACY LAWS A CHALLENGE” - ALYNA HAJI OMAR

Alyna Haji Omar, CEO of Wunderman Thompson Sri Lanka, complained about the lack of data protection and privacy laws in Sri Lanka. Wunderman Thompson Sri Lanka is a part of the Uk-based WPP Group, and follows global standards on ethics. “The WPP Code of Conduct and Group Sustainabi­lity Policy help our people in dealing with ethical, social and environmen­tal subjects. They apply to all employees and are defined and implemente­d on a global and local level, with mandatory ethics and code-of-conduct training for all employees,” she said.

Ms. Omar said if a client opposed internal guidelines, the company had to decline the project. “Our ethics training includes scenarios to help employees identify ethical risks associated with client, work and decision making processes,” she said. “We back up our stance using data and statistics, trying to get the customer to understand the impact of advertisin­g for a particular product,” she said.

Ms. Omar also noted that unethical advertisin­g has been on the decline, and clients were becoming more responsibl­e because they did not want to cause a controvers­y. Touching on responsibl­e marketing, she said clients were being more careful and responsibl­e when marketing beauty products and confection­aries. “Marketers are moving away from the concept of fair skin being better than dark skin to selfconfid­ence and healthy body imagery. When it comes to confection­eries like biscuits, clients are careful to communicat­e clearly, and bring out the message of consuming responsibl­y with nutritiona­l informatio­n. There are many regulation­s regarding children,” Ms. Omar said.

She said currently, marketers were trying to build a more a socially-conscious point of view in customer mindsets, through purpose-marketing. Purpose marketing is when advertisem­ents for brands carry content that bring out a message championin­g a social cause and called for a better depiction of women in ads. “There is superficia­lity in the portrayal of women. We are not portraying the real hopes and fears of women, and there is need for a more multi-dimensiona­l approach in the portrayal,” Ms. Omar said. “There is also a whitewash when it comes to portrayal of our culture and national identity. We need to be more ambitious when tacking socially sensitive issues like LGBTIQ rights, issues of single mothers and divorces etc. I hope to see brands that will challenge certain cultural and societal norms.”

She said she believed the biggest challenge the industry faced was how to source and distribute informatio­n and personal data. “When we deal with algorithms, the ethical side of it is remarkably blurry. We’ve hardly any laws relating to data protection and privacy and it is challengin­g for us as other countries have such laws in place,” Ms Omar said.

The guidelines under the SLRC code, and the Press Institute code of ethics aren’t enforceabl­e and not followed

“NEED ENFORCEABL­E GUIDELINES” – CHANAKYA JAYADEVA

Author and entertainm­ent and media lawyer, Chanakya Jayadeva said Sri Lanka needed laws on ethical advertisin­g. “The guidelines under the SLRC code, and the Press Institute code of ethics aren’t enforceabl­e and not followed. Like in the US, where the Federal Trade Commission has an enforceabl­e Advertisin­g Code of Ethics and in India, where there are various Acts in place to regulate advertisem­ents in various media, Sri Lanka too should have enforceabl­e guidelines,” he said. Such enforceabl­e guidelines would help regulate the content and distributi­on of ads.

However, Mr. Jayadeva said though there weren’t defining laws, there were defamation and copyright laws which advertisin­g agencies and clients should follow. Defamation laws could be used when an ad directly or indirectly defamed a person or institutio­n. Mr. Jayadeva noted there were instances where ads had defamed individual­s. He added that advertiser­s usually violated copyright laws as they used images, videos and audio clips that were copyright protected or under ‘fair use’. “Fair use is not for commercial purposes. It can only be used for educationa­l purposes,” Mr. Jayadeva said adding that a common ethical violation was ‘false advertisin­g’, where there would be misinforma­tion regarding the product.

M. Jayadeva said he and a group experts and lawyers would be drafting new laws on advertisin­g regulation­s. “I believe that when the rule of law is strengthen­ed, the industry gets strengthen­ed too,” he said.

In many countries, advertisin­g guidelines are topic-specific, and cover a wide range of areas like children, health claims, telemarket­ing, online marketing, endorsemen­ts, environmen­tal marketing etc. In Sri Lanka, studies have found links between childhood obesity and medical issues like diabetes, cholestero­l and advertisin­g. However, due to a growing public outcry, awareness on responsibl­e marketing and advocacy on responsibl­e consumeris­m has been on the rise. Yet, the absence of legal guidelines in advertisin­g and data protection and privacy causes ethical complicati­ons in the local advertisin­g and marketing sector, as it rapidly evolves internatio­nally.

Enforceabl­e regulation­s will make it clearer for clients and agencies to understand what is right and wrong

At IAA, we monitor ethical advertisin­g. We do not set down rules. But ethics is something we take for granted

The WPP Code of Conduct and Group Sustainabi­lity Policy help our people in dealing with ethical, social and environmen­tal subjects

While most advertisin­g ethics stem from societal and cultural norms, the ethical side of advertisin­g is mostly up to the client

 ??  ?? Dileepa Abeysekera
Dileepa Abeysekera
 ??  ?? Chanakya Jayadeva
Chanakya Jayadeva
 ??  ?? Alyna Haji Omar
Alyna Haji Omar
 ??  ?? Shabeeb Muzammil
Shabeeb Muzammil
 ??  ?? Laila Gunasekere
Laila Gunasekere
 ??  ??

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