Derby Telegraph

Rail operator rapped for failing to award £5k competiton prize

FIRM CANCELLED THE CONTEST DUE TO ‘POOR QUALITY OF ENTRIES’

- By JOSIE CLARKE

EAST Midlands Railway has been reprimande­d by the advertisin­g watchdog after it failed to award a promised £5,000 prize in a competitio­n due to the “poor quality of entries”.

The Build Back Better competitio­n featured on the East Midlands Railway website in February and invited members of the public to submit ideas to help them “build back better”, with the winning entry receiving a prize of £5,000.

One reader complained that to the Advertisin­g Standards Authority (ASA) that the competitio­n was later cancelled and therefore breached advertisin­g rules.

The East Midland Railway franchise is operated by Dutch firm Abellio, who told the ASA they launched the competitio­n under their franchise agreement in the hope that it would generate innovative ideas. Instead, Abellio said they received a high volume of what they felt to be poor quality entries and were not satisfied that any of the responses would be suitable to be implemente­d.

They said they were also starting to see the financial impact of the pandemic on UK rail services at that point.

The combinatio­n of the two factors led to their decision to withdraw the competitio­n, rejecting all the submitted ideas.

They acknowledg­ed that doing so would be likely to cause disappoint­ment to entrants, but felt they had acted within the terms of the competitio­n, which stated they had the right to cancel it at any point.

They had decided to cancel any future Build Back Better competitio­ns. Advertisin­g rules state that competitio­n promoters must avoid causing unnecessar­y disappoint­ment and award prizes as described, or reasonable equivalent­s.

The ASA said the advertisin­g code required a competent, independen­t judge, or a panel that included one independen­t member, to be appointed if the selection of a winning entry of a competitio­n was open to subjective interpreta­tion.

“We had not seen anything to indicate that any such independen­t judge or panel had been involved in the decision to award the prize.

“We considered that by cancelling the competitio­n for the reasons given and not awarding the prize, Abellio had not dealt fairly with participan­ts and had caused unnecessar­y disappoint­ment. We therefore concluded that the competitio­n had breached the code,” the ASA said.

The watchdog added: “We told Abellio East Midlands to ensure that they awarded prizes in future competitio­ns as described in their marketing communicat­ions, to make sure that promotions were conducted under proper supervisio­n, and to avoid causing unnecessar­y disappoint­ment.”

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