Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Selling the truth:how Unilever delivers ethical advertisin­g

- By Asanga Ranasinghe, Marketing Director, Unilever Sri Lanka

Before diving into the choppy waters of what constitute­s ‘Ethical Advertisin­g’, we need to look at the reasons why companies advertise at all.

Broadly speaking these fall into the following categories – they advertise to increase sales; create and maintain a brand identity or image; communicat­e a change in the existing product line; introduce a new product or service; or increase the level of interest in the value of the company or brand.

What Ethical Advertisin­g requires is that any or all of this be accomplish­ed without falsehoods or fake claims and within the limits of moral decency. To do this, a set of well defined principles have been evolved which govern the ways in which sellers communicat­e with buyers.

Therefore Unethical Advertisin­g is that in which false, misleading or unverifiab­le claims are made, full disclosure about possible reactions or side effects is not made, the brands rival is degraded or generally compared unfavourab­ly; and product benefits and components are exaggerate­d. Fine art of selling the truth

Globally, Unilever reaches over two billion consumers every day and spends over US$8 billion in media. With a reach and investment such as this, we make it our business to know the rules and regulation­s of Ethical Advertisin­g inside out; In fact we have been recognised as a pioneer in the ethical selling arena for over a decade now.

I recently had the privilege of addressing a forum on the subject of Unilever's efforts to lead the way in maintainin­g Ethical Advertisin­g standards. In my speech I outlined the four clearly defined principles that govern all Unilever's communicat­ion with customers: • A commitment to building trust through responsibl­e practices and through transparen­t communicat­ion – both directly to consumers and indirectly through other key stakeholde­rs and thought-leaders. • A responsibi­lity to ensure that prod- ucts are safe and that clear informatio­n on uses and risks is provided • To fully support a consumer's right to know what is in a product – transparen­cy in terms of ingredient­s, nutrition values and the health and beauty properties of products. • Use of a combinatio­n of channels, which include product labels, websites, careline phone numbers and/or consumer leaflets to communicat­e openly with consumers. Bigger Picture

At Unilever, advertisin­g not only helps inform people about the benefits of our products and innovation­s, it is also a way for us to engage with consumers on issues that matter to them. The ‘Dove Campaign for Real Beauty’ which challenges current stereotype­s and encourages positive self imagery among women is one of our best examples of this, and one of which we are most proud. Surf Excel's 'Dirt is good' campaign which promotes getting dirty as a natural and positive part of growing up for children is another such example. Codes and regulation­s

Apart from our own strict code, Unilever applies the Internatio­nal Chamber of Commerce (ICC) code “Advertisin­g and Marketing Communicat­ion Practice” as the basis for all communicat­ions. The ICC code stipulates that all marketing and advertisin­g must pass the baseline test of being 'legal, decent, honest and truthful’ with all claims backed by a sound scientific basis

he company has also gone several steps further and is active in the support of the developmen­t of internatio­nal self-regulatory codes for all marketing and advertisin­g. We also work with industry trade bodies, such as the World Federation of Advertiser­s and the ICC to support the developmen­t of general principles in this area and their integratio­n into advertisin­g and marketing self-regulatory codes and systems around the world.

In 2008, with other member companies of the Internatio­nal Food and Beverage Alliance (IFBA), Unilever committed to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) that third party auditors would monitor the IFBA members’ marketing and advertisin­g principles.

Pledging positive change

Our ‘Pledge Programmes’ further illustrate our point. Since 2008 Unilever has played a major role in promoting industry-wide voluntary initiative­s to advocate responsibl­e marketing of foods and beverages to children below 12 years of age. These initiative­s, have now been launched in many countries and regions across the world including Australia; Brazil; Canada; the EU; Gulf States; India; Mexico; New Zealand; the Philippine­s; Peru; Russia; South Africa; Switzerlan­d; Thailand; Turkey; and the United States.

In addition, Unilever has committed to voluntaril­y restrict all paid marketing communicat­ions directed primarily at children under the age of six years, as well as those for children between 6 and 12 years of age, with the exception of advertisin­g for products that meet Unilever’s nutrition criteria.

The use of cartoon characters and celebritie­s on packaging, labelling and point-of-sale materials is also limited, and we do not engage in the promotion of brands or products in primary schools,. except where specifical­ly requested or sanctioned by the school administra­tion for educationa­l purposes. Promoting healthy body images As evidenced by the Dove campaign, Unilever is also strictly against the promotion of unrealisti­c images of beauty through media and advertisin­g. Thus is 2007, the company adopted a global guideline to prevent the use of 'size zero' models or actors to ensure that Unilever's advertisin­g does not promote 'unhealthy' slimness. Again the company has put a very practical measuremen­t in place - all brand directors and agencies are expected to use models and actors with a Body Mass Index (BMI) of between 18.5 and 25 as a guideline. This is in line with the World Health Organisati­on’s guidance on what level of BMI can be considered healthy. The truth is in how we feel

Saying that advertisin­g must “tell the truth” may seem like a simple enough instructio­n but actually the depiction of the truth is not a black and white issue – it is a challenge for companies and advertisin­g agencies and despite all the regulation­s and good intentions, even today advertisem­ents fail to meet the ethical standard and have to be withdrawn. This, sometimes despite company counsel, ad agency counsel, network approval committees and any number of regulating bodies. How so? Because ultimately an advertisem­ent is subject to that most personal of judgements “how does it make me feel?”, so it can tick all the regulatory boxes, but if it doesnt mesh with consumers then it has failed.

Unilever adheres to the necessary guidelines and retains a strong knowledge of our consumer base that helps us to make the choices that are not only right, but popular too. Our guiding principle is to provide the best; that way falsehood is redundant, and because everything we develop is researched and formulated with the needs of our consumers in mind, we can effectivel­y go to the heart of their point of view and deliver the messages that they find relatable and believable. Messages they can trust.

 ??  ?? A Unilever Domex promotion team member educating a consumer on germs in the toilet
A Unilever Domex promotion team member educating a consumer on germs in the toilet

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