The Citizen (Gauteng)

Your rights on competitio­ns

STIPULATIO­NS: WHO MAY TAKE PART, THAT YOU MAY REFUSE AND HOW WINNERS ARE CHOSEN Section 36 was included to deal with promotions by time-share firms.

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Consumers have various rights when it comes to promotiona­l competitio­ns. We have all entered these competitio­ns before to win a car, a holiday or even airtime and data. These are all competitio­ns held to promote a company or business and therefore they are called promotiona­l competitio­ns.

When you participat­e in a competitio­n, your consumer rights are protected by the Consumer Protection Act (CPA) and it was specifical­ly included because so many consumers complained about competitio­ns, especially those held in the early 2000s by time-share companies that called you to say you have won a prize, but then required you to attend a presentati­on to “win” a holiday although you never entered.

CPA covers these competitio­ns

Section 36 stipulates that a promotiona­l competitio­n must be used to promote a supplier of specific goods and services in the ordinary course of business and the winner must be chosen by lot or by chance, such as a random draw. This means that the occasional raffle or lucky draw by a school or church is not a promotiona­l competitio­n and does not have to comply with these requiremen­ts.

These conditions to win are not allowed

Ever entered a competitio­n where you had to pay to have your prize delivered or where you had to buy something to qualify? This is not allowed. According to section 36, nobody is allowed to inform you that you won a prize if:

▶ There has been no competitio­n; You did not win;

▶ You had to first meet a condition that was not disclosed beforehand;

▶ You are required to pay or buy any other goods to get the prize;

▶ You do not have a right to win the prize and; or

▶ If the prize was generally available or offered to all similar consumers or groups.

Section 36 also stipulates that companies cannot require you to pay for postage or the cost of sending the entry and this includes paying for the opportunit­y to participat­e, access to the competitio­n or for a device to use to enter the competitio­n.

According to Regulation 11, SMS entries cannot cost more than R1.50 and you cannot be required to pay for further communicat­ion.

Who can win?

Most competitio­ns has a requiremen­t that anybody who works for a company or their suppliers and their immediate family members could not enter competitio­ns. Section 36 takes this further, by prohibitin­g companies from awarding a prize to anyone who is a director, member, partner, employee, agent of the promoter, consultant, somebody who is directly or indirectly by the promoter, or who is a supplier of goods and services in connection with the competitio­n.

Competitio­n rules

Section 36 requires companies to draw up competitio­n rules before the beginning of a competitio­n and make these rules available free of charge to the National Consumer Commission and any participan­t who asks for it.

In addition, companies must keep a copy of the rules for at least three years after the end of the competitio­n. It is sufficient to have the rules available on a website.

Offering the opportunit­y to participat­e

When a company offers you the opportunit­y to participat­e in a promotiona­l competitio­n, the offer must clearly state what you can win if you enter, what you must do to accept the offer and participat­e, how the results of the competitio­n will be determined, the closing date, how the results will be made known and the contact details of the person who can give you a copy of the competitio­n rules and the date, time and place where you can claim the prize.

The organisers can include this informatio­n in the competitio­n entry, an attached document or an advertisem­ent published at the time and in the area in which the competitio­n is held.

You have the right to participat­e in a competitio­n as soon as you comply with the conditions and get entry to the medium to enter the competitio­n. You have the right to claim a prize as soon as the results of the competitio­n are determined and you cannot then be subject to more conditions or payment for the prize.

Your rights as the winner

If you win, the company or its promoter cannot, according to section 36, force you to participat­e in any marketing and this includes using photograph­s of you.

You must get a chance to say no. However, any promoter who includes this as a requiremen­t in the rules will not be allowed to enforce it according to regulation 11.

Choosing the winner

According to section 36, the promoter must ensure that the competitio­n is audited but is not allowed to use an internal auditor.

Only an independen­t accountant, registered auditor, attorney or advocate can oversee and certify the competitio­n and report this through the promoters’ internal audit reporting or other suitable method of validation and verificati­on.

Records must be kept of the competitio­n

The company sponsoring the competitio­n must keep full details of the promoter, rules, offer to participat­e and the names and identity numbers of the people responsibl­e, as well as a full list of all the prizes, copies of all the marketing material for the competitio­n and a list of all instances when the competitio­n was marketed.

In addition, the company must also keep records of the names and identity numbers of the people responsibl­e for choosing the winners, a list of all winners by name and identity number, a list of the dates when the prizes were handed over or paid to winners.

The records of the competitio­n must also include steps taken if a winner could not be contacted, and what the promoter did to ensure the winner received the prize.

Declaratio­ns by the people running the competitio­n that as far as they know, none of the winners were directors, members, partners, employees, agents or consultant­s or other people who directly or indirectly control the promoter or are controlled by the promoter or marketing service providers, or their spouses, life partners, business partners or family members must also be kept.

Company may not force you to take part in any marketing

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