Title: Neville Rigby Director of Policy and Public Affairs
1Responsibility in marketing and media La
responsabilidad en el marketing y los medios de
comunicaciĂłn masiva
- Neville RigbyDirector of Policy and Public
Affairs - International Association for the Study of Obesity
IOTF March 25 - HEALTH AND NUTRITION SUMMIT CHILE
2008 - PREVENTION OF NUTRITION/DIET PHYSICAL
ACTIVITY RELATED CHRONIC DISEASES
2Responsibility of the Marketing /Advertising
industry, Mass Media, Social Communication and
Consumers in the Prevention of Obesity and
related Chronic Diseases
La responsabilidad del márketing y publicidad,
medios masivos, comunicaciĂłn social y
consumidores en la prevenciĂłn y control de
Enfermedades Cronicas
3- Kicking off with social communication
- Puntapié inicial de la comunicación social
4Armchair football
5How the EU and UEFA tackled obesity
- The European Commissions health and consumer
division sponsored TV advertising campaign during
the UEFA Champions League football match series. - 30 second advertisements screened at half time
during 111 matches on 60 European TV stations. - No follow up and no evaluation.
- No data on how a brief advertising campaign could
have any significant effect on population
behaviour.
6Social marketing zero effect?ComunicaciĂłn
social NingĂşn efecto?
- If you just run some advertising and then forget
about it, its going to have zero effect. - Si hace publicidad y luego no hace nada mas, esto
no va a tener ningún efecto   - If were seeing obesity as a societal problem, it
could be a decade before it shows results. - Si se ve la obesidad como una problema de la
sociedad, puede pasar mas de una década ante de
se vean resultados - Hamish Pringle, Director General of the Institute
of Practitioners in Advertising, UK quoted on the
UKs 75m advertising campaign on obesity. -
International Herald Tribune Feb 10 2008
7Analysis of a major social communication
programme
- The BBCs largest ever health campaign
- Dedicated programmes over seven weeks
- Promotion on local and national radio and TV
- Aimed at "motivating behavioural change."
- The BBC informed every health authority to
- collaborate with health professionals.
BARB analysis of audience size for each of the
FFFF TV programmes Wardle et al, Health
Education Research 2001
82m budget for intense media campaign
- The BBCs largest ever health campaign - 2m
budget - Dedicated programmes over seven weeks
- Promotion on local and national radio and TV
- Aimed at "motivating behavioural change."
- The BBC informed every health authority to
- collaborate with health professionals.
BARB analysis of audience size for each of the
FFFF TV programmes Wardle et al, Health
Education Research 2001
9Awareness / Behaviour
mass-media health campaigns can enhance
knowledge and awareness of health-related
issues.evidence that they can stimulate
behaviour change is less convincing. The people
who appeared to gain least from the campaign were
those from ethnic minority groups. The other
groups left relatively untouched by the campaign
were those who were overweight or obese. The
majority of the British population had heard of
the campaign, many watched the TV programmes,
and most correctly recalled the lifestyle change
message. On the present evidence, fewer than 1
actively participated, indicating a huge gulf
between awareness and behaviour.
Wardle et al, Health Education Research 2001
10Mass Media - Medios masivos
- The mass media can create awareness but not
understanding - Los medios masivos pueden aumentar la conciencia
pero no la comprensiĂłn del problema -
- Messages in the media are not always consistent.
Many articles may question or counteract
important health messages.
11Global media 60,000 articles in English
12Aproximadamente 2 millones resultados para
obesidad
13Consumer choice?
14Level playing field for consumers?
Neuroscience uses magnetic resonance imaging
scanners to track brain responses to taste and
packaging stimuli. Marketing the brand image
changes how the brain responds when given an
emotional cue. An estimated 3,000 artificial
food technology flavourings developed to
market taste to consumers
15Eye-Tracking Technology
Measures attraction to products
16 Less than 1 in 3 new products are healthier
Source Fighting Obesity Food and drink NPD
strategies in weight prevention, management and
loss Business Insights in association with
Europanel 2006
17 Even less for children.
Source Fighting Obesity Food and drink NPD
strategies in weight prevention, management and
loss Business Insights in association with
Europanel 2006
18 Self regulation and child-targeted products
Source Fighting Obesity Food and drink NPD
strategies in weight prevention, management and
loss Business Insights in association with
Europanel 2006
19Responsibility of the Marketing /Advertising
industry,
La responsabilidad de las Empresas de
márketing/mercadeo y publicidad
20Growth in marketing in Spanish language in the
USA
Crecimiento del markéting en español en los
Estados Unidos
Source Nielsen Monitor-Plus
21Evidence of effectiveness of a voluntary approach
to marketing to children
- USA - Better Business Bureau Childrens
Advertising Review Unit
22 1961National Association of Broadcasters' first
adopted self-regulatory toy TV advertising
guidelines.
1970sAction for Children's Television (ACT)
calls on FCC and FTC to prohibit or limit TV
advertising directed at children.
23 1961National Association of Broadcasters' first
adopted self-regulatory toy TV advertising
guidelines.
1970sAction for Children's Television (ACT)
calls on FCC and FTC to prohibit or limit TV
advertising directed at children.
- 1974Federal restrictions on TV adverts which
- Limit adverts to 12 min/hr weekdays and 9.5
min/hr at weekends - Separate content from commercials
- Require identified commercial break
- 1978
- FTC proposes to ban or
- severely restrict all TV
- advertising to children,
- arguing that it is
- inherently unfair and
- deceptive
- Strong resistance
24 1961National Association of Broadcasters' first
adopted self-regulatory toy TV advertising
guidelines.
1970sAction for Children's Television (ACT)
calls on FCC and FTC to prohibit or limit TV
advertising directed at children.
- 1974Federal restrictions on TV adverts which
- Limit adverts to 12 min/hr weekdays and 9.5
min/hr at weekends - Separate content from commercials
- Require identified commercial break
- 1978
- FTC proposes to ban or restrict all TV adverts to
- children, inherently unfair and deceptive
- Industry opposed
1980 Congress passes FTC Improvements Act to
Remove FTCs authority to restrict advertising
25 1961Self reg on toys.
1970sACT calls for ban on childrens ads
1974Federal limits
- 1978
- FTC Kid Vid ban
- Industry opposed
1980 FTC barred from acting.
26 1961Self reg on toys.
1970sACT calls for ban on childrens ads
1974Federal limits
- 1978
- FTC Kid Vid ban
- Industry opposed
1980 FTC barred from acting.
1990Children's Television Act limits commercials
on childrens TV to 1 in every 5 minutes
27 1961Self reg on toys.
1970sACT calls for ban on childrens ads
1974Federal limits
- 1978
- FTC Kid Vid ban
- Industry opposed
1980 FTC barred from acting.
281961Self reg on toys.
1970sACT calls for ban on childrens ads
1974Federal limits
- 1978
- FTC Kid Vid ban
- Industry opposed
1980 FTC barred from acting.
29CDC Warns 1 in 3 children will develop Type 2
diabetes
1961Self reg on toys.
1970sACT calls for ban on childrens ads
1974Federal limits
- 1978
- FTC Kid Vid ban
- Industry opposed
1980 FTC barred from acting.
30USA - Children's Food and Beverage Advertising
Initiative
- A voluntary self-regulation program with many of
the nation's largest food and beverage companies
as participants. - Designed to shift the mix of advertising
messaging to children to encourage healthier
dietary choices and healthy lifestyles. - Participants include
- Burger King Corp. Cadbury Adams, USA, LLC
Campbell Soup Company, The Coca-Cola Company,
General Mills, Inc. The Hershey Company, Kellogg
Company, Kraft Foods Inc. Mars, Inc. McDonald's
USA, PepsiCo, Inc. and Unilever United States. - These corporations occupy two-thirds of the
market for children's food and beverage
television advertising.
31Disadvantage of voluntary approach
- Although some companies agree they should limit
marketing to children, not all do - Standards are low
- Voluntary regulation may reflect existing market
profiles - Children under 12 still considered legitimate
targets - Self-regulation healthy labels may actually
have up to 35 fat and 25 sugar - Few restrictions if children are watching with
other adults - Free for all on the internet
32(No Transcript)
33Messages to children take many forms
David Beckham soft drinks
Gary Lineker potato crisps
34The environmental challenge
35International Chamber of Commerce code
- As children are consumers of food and beverages,
they are legitimately a focus of marketing and
have the right to information about the products
that interest them. - However, because of their lack of experience as
consumers, young children deserve especially
careful treatment by marketers in any commercial
communications directed to them. - ICC recognizes that children constitute an
audience with a more limited capacity to assess
information in marketing communication, which is
why specific provisions on marketing
communications to children are included in ICC
guidelines and codes.
36EU Platform for action on diet, activity and
health
- A forum for action on obesity
- Industry groups have made voluntary commitments
- UNESDA - soft drink companies will not advertise
to children lt12 - Other food industry pledges vary from not
marketing directly to children aged 12, 8, or
sometimes 6 - unless the product is considered
by the manufacturer to be healthy - Concern that the Platform is restricted and
cannot deal with 90 of the actions by industry
that impact on obesity - Food industry groups unable to deliver commitment
from all members or across the entire marketplace
37Marketing to children in Europe
- In France, UK, Italy, Germany and Spain during
childrens airtime - ONE FOOD COMMERCIAL IS BROADCAST EVERY 5 MINUTES
- This means 33,000 commercials per year.
- About 60 of food advertising is programmed in
- childrens airtime 4-9 pm
- About 40 of big-6 category TV advertising (Soft
drinks, - confectionary, snacks, fast food, convenience
food, - cereals) is in childrens airtime.
- Source The Effect of Advertising and Marketing
Practices on Child - Obesity Barnabè D et al, Policy Department
Economic and Scientific - Policy, European Parliament. February 2008
38 Marketing experts are concerned
Internet marketing standards criticised While
the regulators, or even the industry itself in
various countries, through self-regulation, has
regulated advertising to children and pledged
responsible marketing to this segment, the same
advertisers appear to forget the promises as
soon as they are advertising online. As such,
they are in breach of the spirit of the current
self-regulatory provisions that apply to other
forms of marketing communications. Failure of
the industry to ensure exemplary behaviour from
its members across all forms of marketing
communication may lead to the imposition of
restrictions if not outright bans on marketing
activity directed at children. Source
Analysing Advergames Active Diversions or
Actually Deception, Dahl et al Middlesex
University Business School 2006
39You need to drink only 227 bottles to win junior
sports kit
40Controlling marketing is part of a societal
solution
- Children should be protected from marketing
techniques, - Including internet, viral marketing, in-school
promotions, and - on-site promotions as well as existing television
marketing. It - should become a social norm not to market to
children. - Governments should regulate to support those
already - adopting voluntarily approaches and to ensure
adherence. - The evidence for marketing restrictions is
compelling for pre - teenage years, but the precautionary principle
should apply to - teenagers, who are particularly vulnerable to the
impact of - marketing psychology and media influences on
adolescent - behaviour and development. It should be
emphasized that the - Convention on the Rights of the Child specifies
children as - those under 18 years.
- In addition special care is also needed in
relation to the
41- MARKETING
- Children should be protected from marketing
techniques, - Including internet, viral marketing, in-school
promotions, and - on-site promotions as well as existing television
marketing. It - should become a social norm not to market to
children. - Governments should regulate to support those
already - adopting voluntarily approaches and to ensure
adherence. - The evidence for marketing restrictions is
compelling for pre - teenage years, but the precautionary principle
should apply to - teenagers, who are particularly vulnerable to the
impact of - marketing psychology and media influences on
adolescent - behaviour and development. It should be
emphasized that the - Convention on the Rights of the Child specifies
children as - those under 18 years.
- In addition special care is also needed in
relation to the
42What type of action is needed?
- IOTF Sydney Principles 2006
- The rights of children to safe, nutritious food.
- Protect children from commercial exploitation.
- Commercial-free schools, child care etc.
- Cross-border control by international agreements.
- Statutory control for a high level of protection.
- Evaluate. Monitor. Enforce.
- Commercial promotions of all types
43CODIGO INTERNACIONAL PARA EL MERCADEO DE BEBIDAS
Y ALIMENTOS PARA LOS NIĂ‘OS 2008
44Recommendations for an International Code on
Marketing of Foods and Non-Alcoholic Beverages to
Children
Recomendaciones del cĂłdigo internacional sobre la
comercializaciĂłn de alimentos y bebidas no
alcohólicas dirigida a niños y niñas
45Marketing 3 important considerations
- The importance of restricting the promotion of
HFSS products whilst enabling the promotion of
foods in line with WHO dietary recommendations
- The public health imperative to ensure that ALL
children are protected. - The importance of ensuring that all forms of
current and potential promotional marketing
techniques are included. Diet, Nutrition and
the Prevention of Chronic Diseases Report of a
Joint WHO/FAO Expert Consultation WHO Technical
Report 916, 2003
46No promotion of HFSS foods
- No marketing to children of energy-dense,
nutrient poor foods that are high in fat, sugar
or salt and brands associated with such foods. - Definition of energy-dense, micro-nutrient poor
foods that are high in fat, sugar or salt and
brands associated with such foods for the purpose
of implementing this Code shall be based on
dietary recommendations established by WHO and
defined by nutrient profiling. - WHO should propose an international approach to
the define foods that are high in fat, sugar or
salt
47 Recommended TV and broadcasting controls
- Applies to both the absolute number of children
likely to be watching and number of children as a
proportion of the overall audience shall be taken
into account. - Includes all advertisements and promotions
broadcast between the hours of 06.00 and 21.00 - Existing legal restrictions apply in many
countries including Norway, Sweden, Quebec,
Canada, and more limited restrictions apply in
the UK, Ireland, France etc.
48Key factors on other marketing
- the use of celebrities to appeal to children
- the use of cartoon characters including brand
owned and licensed - the inclusion of free gifts, toys or collectible
items with appeal to children - the use of competitions, vouchers or games with
appeal to children - the shape or novelty value of the food or food
packaging - sponsorship of materials, products, people,
events, projects, cultural, artistic or sporting
activities or places popular with children or
with a significant child audience
49Indirect advertising to parents or adults
- HFSS foods shall not be promoted to adults as
being suitable for children or imply - that an adult who purchases such a food is a
better, more intelligent, more caring or more
generous adult than one who does not do so -
- that the child they are responsible for, when fed
these products, will be more intelligent and
gifted - that a balanced and varied diet cannot provide
adequate quantities of nutrients in general
50Monitoring and enforcement
- Governments and WHO should monitor implementation
of a code. - Manufacturers should monitor their marketing
practices to ensure they conform - NGOs, professional groups, institutions and
individuals should be watchdogs - Consumers have a private right of action to
challenge violations of the Code. - Marketing and advertising staff should be
informed of their responsibilities under the - code.
- Member States should notify WHO of steps to
implement the Code. - WHO should report to Member States at the World
Health Assembly on progress - in implementation
- WHO should provide technical support to Member
States in preparing - national legislation
51In conclusion
- Health ministers and technical experts should
agree that - marketing to children requires both global
standards and national controls - reducing the marketing pressures on children is
one of a - range of changes necessary for a conducive
environment - Voluntary actions are insufficient statutory
measures are - necessary to affect all marketing
- Failure to address marketing will weaken other
efforts to - protect vulnerable children
52Conclusiones
- Los Ministerios de Salud y expertos tecnicos
deben acordar que - El marketing-mercadeo dirigido a los niños
requiere de controles nacionales e
internacionales (leyes y reglamentos). - La reducciĂłn de la presiĂłn del marketing sobre
los niños - es uno de los cambios necesarios para tener
un ambiente que facilite la promocion de salud - Las acciones voluntarias son insuficientes las
leyes son esenciales para regular todas las
formas de marketing no solo los avisos de la TV. - El no actuar sobre las fuerzas del mercadeo
debilitara los otros esfuerzos para proteger a
los niños vulnerables
53International Association for the Study of
Obesity www.iaso.orgInternational Obesity
TaskForcewww.iotf.orgGlobal Alliance for the
Prevention of Obesity and related Chronic
Diseaseswww.preventionalliance.net