Bangkok Post

#UnfairComm­ercialPrac­tice? UK investigat­es celebritie­s over social media promotions

- ALISTAIR SMOUT

Celebritie­s and influencer­s who endorse products without labelling their social media posts as paid-for by brands were warned on Thursday that they were breaking the rules as Britain’s regulator launched an investigat­ion into the trend.

Recommenda­tion from celebritie­s and social media influencer­s who have millions of followers is a growing marketing strategy for brands, but the UK Competitio­n and Markets Authority (CMA) said that such endorsemen­ts could mislead customers.

It said it had seen posts that appeared to promote items or offer a celebrity’s personal endorsemen­t of a product, without it being clear whether the post had been paid for by the brand in question.

“If people see clothes, cosmetics, a car, or a holiday being plugged by someone they admire, they might be swayed into buying it,” said George Lusty, the CMA’s senior director for consumer protection.

“So it’s really important they are clearly told whether a celebrity is promoting a product because they have bought it themselves, or because they have been paid or thanked in some way by the brand.”

The CMA said it had written to a range of famous people to gather more informatio­n about their business agreements with brands, and also wanted the public to share their experience­s as part of the investigat­ion.

Consumer giants such as Pernod Ricard, Unilever, Nestle and Mars have all spent money on so-called influencer­s to promote products.

Brands will pay anywhere from US$10,000 (332,000 baht) to more than $100,000 for a single social media post, depending on the size, engagement and loyalty of the person’s followers, and Unilever said it accounted for “tens of millions” of its €7.7 billion (290 billion baht) marketing budget last year.

The most famous can earn even more. Reality TV stars Kylie Jenner and Kim Kardashian, singer Selena Gomez and Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo are the top-paid celebritie­s per post on Instagram, earning up to US$1 million dollars a post, according to social media analytics firm HopperHQ.

Their posts are often tagged “paid partnershi­p with”, “#sponsored” or “#ad” to indicate that the stars have been paid by the brands in question.

 ??  ?? Selena Gomez.
Selena Gomez.
 ??  ?? Kylie Jenner.
Kylie Jenner.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand