The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) says that anyone who has 30,000 social media followers is defined as a ‘celebrity’ from an advertising perspective.
The bar is set at 30,000 social media followers with the legal precedent set by the case of Sarah Willox Knott, a parenting blogger, who promoted a sedative to her Instagram followers in a declared advert. This circumvented strict laws banning celebrities and health professionals from promoting medication.
Knott’s undoing came in a February photograph uploaded to her ThisMamaLife Instagram account in which a packet of Phenergan Night Time Tablets was clearly visible in the background. It was captioned with a glowing endorsement of the ‘pharmacy only’ insomnia pill.
With a follower tally of 32,000, Knott sought to portray herself as an ordinary member of the public and thus exempt from the rules but the ASA felt otherwise.
In a statement, the body wrote: “We considered over 30,000 followers indicated that she had the attention of a significant number of people. Given that she was popular with, and had the attention of a large audience, we considered that ThisMamaLife was a celebrity for the purposes of the CAP Code.”
The case marks the first time an ‘influencer’ has fallen foul of the new stricter definition and follows in the wake of a spate of ‘influencer’ promotions materialising on popular social platforms, most recently evidenced in the case of Sophie Hinchliffe who was found to have broken the rules with a series of undeclared P&G posts.
source:/www.thedrum.com
MARKETING Magazine is not responsible for the content of external sites.