Hi Oliver,
We do have a document available that summarises the underlying issues and explains the view that we have taken with regard to any campaigns that we run that are covered by the regulation. I
am happy to send that over or talk through some of the underlying issues if that would be helpful.
There are also a few areas on the FSA website which you should read through. I
am currently out of the office but will arrange for these to be posted later today.
To give a bit of background, the sale of General Insurance Products (with a few minor exceptions) is governed by the Financial Services and Markets Act. This only happened a couple of years ago and at the same time the legislation was extended to cover first charge mortgages. The sale of non-first charge mortgages (essentially most secured loan products) and other credit products is goverened by the Consumer Credit Act. In previous posts over the years there has been some confusion between the two. This is largely caused by the fact that The Financial Services and Markets Act incorporates an almost exact replica of the Consumer Credit Act within it.
The Consumer Credit Act (and related part of the Financial Services and Markets Act) is relatively straight forward to comply with as it is extremely prescriptive, including stating the relative font sizes of particular APRs etc.
The Financial Services and Markets Act is less clear cut. The underlying principle is that if your are advising you need to be authorised and therefore if you are not authorised you should not provide advice. However, having spoken to a large number of compliance people over the last few years there are an extremely wide range of views on what this actually means. The law is very openly worded and does not specifically deal with Affiliate Marketing separately from other types of marketing.
Unfortunately, this means that you will not be able to get an explicit list of does and dont's only a set of opinions. You will need to draw some of your own conclusions.
A couple of key points to bear in mind:
- You are being paid for each sale generated. You are therefore incentivised to encourage people to buy a product. This is very different to being a journalist and exemptions available to them would not apply to you.
- Depending on your site you are probably positioning yourself as an expert, for example, if you say "We'll help you find the best Car Insurance". You may know that you are not an expert but a consumer does not.
- As DrivetoWin says, star systems etc are probably the same as making an explicit written recomendation.
That said there is a lot of activity that you can do without giving advice. On most of our programmes we provide content that has been signed off by the merchant as compliant and you are required to use this to ensure that product specific content is within the regulation.
Hopefully the above is useful but if you have any questions then please feel free to give me call, although I will not be in the office until tomorrow.
Nic