29/11/22 – The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) recently published new guidance on email marketing and phone marketing. The guidance is supplementary to the ICO’s Guide to the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations (PECR) and (124-page) draft Direct Marketing Code of Practice.
Direct marketing is a fiddly area, with different rules depending on whether you’re using email/text, phone, post or (perhaps less likely) fax, and also whether you’re marketing to companies, sole traders/partnerships, or individuals. This post takes a look at the rules for direct marketing by UK businesses of their own products and services, either by email or text/voice messaging services (such as WhatsApp or LinkedIn), or by phone. It is not exhaustive, and there are additional rules if for example you are selling pensions or claims management services, marketing to children etc.
What’s the relevant law?
The law applicable to direct marketing is set out in the Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations 2003 (PECR) and to a lesser extent the UK GDPR and Data Protection Act 2018. The ICO provides extensive, plain English overviews of all areas of marketing law.
Direct marketing by email/messaging services
If you’re looking to market to a contact by email or using a text or voice messaging service then you either need to obtain the contact’s consent or you need to check if you can use the so-called ‘soft opt-in’ exemption.
Consent. For consent to be valid it needs to be freely given, specific, informed and unambiguous. In practice this means no pre-ticked checkboxes, and making sure the consent covers the type of communication you’re using – obtaining consent for marketing by email does not entitle you to send them a WhatsApp. The consent also needs to be separate from other consents, so you can’t include marketing consent in the tickbox wording used for accepting your terms of service.
Soft opt-in exemption. To use the soft opt-in exemption, you need to meet all of the following criteria:
A few things to bear in mind:
Direct marketing by phone
In short, you do not consent for making direct marketing phone calls, whether to individuals or to businesses, unless either of the following applies:
If the phone number is listed on TSP or CTPS you can still get consent to receive marketing calls. The ICO have suggested that any consent for overriding a TSP/CTPS listing should aim to meet the GDPR-style, opt-in standard that applies to direct marketing by email.
When making a direct marketing phone call, you must display your phone number (or a valid alternative number), say who is calling (and provide contact details if asked), provide clear information about the marketing, and make it easy for the recipient to object or opt out.
Tags: #marketing, #pecr, #softoptin, ICO
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