PARTYGAMING MAG AD PULLED BY A.S.A.
10 April 2009
Complaint that advert is misleading and
unsubstantiated upheld
The UK Advertising Standards Authority this week lists
iGlobal Media Marketing (a forerunner and subsidiary of
the PartyGaming group) among its banned adverts
following a review on a single complaint that the
content was misleading and could not be substantiated.
The ASA details the case, identifying the disputed
material as a magazine ad for a gaming website which
stated: "WARNING! BE CAREFUL WHERE YOU WIN PLAYERS WIN
MORE AT PARTYPOKER". Text in the body copy asserted:
"Play for a $2m guaranteed prize pool ... find out why
more people love to win at PartyPoker.com*."
The
asterisk was linked to small print that stated "Poker
Players Research Ltd Opinion Poll, May 08, Sample size
10 000".
This ad generated one complaint, which
challenged the headline "Players Win More at PartyPoker"
and the statement: "... more people love to win at
PartyPoker.com" as misleading and unsubstantiated.
Responding to the complaint, PartyPoker Marketing in
Gibraltar said the claims were based on the results of a
survey carried out in May 2008 by Poker Player Research
Ltd (PPR). The purpose of the survey was to find out
poker players' perceptions of the online gaming market
and of poker sites in particular.
PartyGaming
claimed that PPR was an independent company and the
results of their research were therefore independent of
all online gaming businesses. They said PPR surveyed 10
000 randomly selected, regular poker players worldwide
and those respondents were selected from an initial
sample of over 150 000. A 'regular' player was defined
as someone who played at least once per month.
The company gave details of the methodology used in the
survey and pointed out that PPR believed it was accurate
to state that their site had the easiest players to win
money from. PartyGaming said it followed that, if
respondents found that other players on their site were
easiest to win money from, those respondents would be
winning more easily and more often. They therefore
believed their use of the claims in the ad was
justified.
The firm pointed out that the claims
were clearly referenced to the footnote which made clear
that they were based on the results of a survey of 10
000 people.
The ASA adjudicator noted that
PartyGaming had consulted the CAP Copy Advice team prior
to publishing the ad, although the presentation of that
ad was slightly different to the one eventually
published. The Copy Advice team advised that, provided
PartyGaming held substantiation for their claims, the ad
was likely to be acceptable under the CAP Code. However,
CAP had not actually seen or assessed any evidence
regarding the substantiation.
The ASA therefore
concluded that the survey data submitted by PartyGaming
was the result of an opinion poll. "We considered that
the claim "PLAYERS WIN MORE AT PARTYPOKER" was a factual
claim capable of objective substantiation. We noted the
ad stated "Play for a $2m guaranteed prize pool ..." and
considered that readers were likely to infer that they
could win more money playing at PartyPoker.com than at
other sites," the ASA report reads.
"We
considered that, while the survey demonstrated that
respondents said they had won more money playing cash
games and had won more 'Sit and Go' tournaments at
PartyPoker.com, we considered that the evidence, which
was based on subjective opinions, was insufficient to
support an objective claim. To substantiate the claim
"... PLAYERS WIN MORE AT PARTYPOKER", we expected to see
comparative evidence showing that players had won more
money playing at PartyPoker than at other sites. Because
we had not, we concluded that the claim could mislead,"
the adjudicator reported.
The complaint was
upheld on both counts as readers were likely to infer
that the survey had shown that PartyPoker.com was the
most popular of the sites included in the survey.
"Whilst we noted the survey demonstrated that
respondents said they had won more money playing cash
games, had won more 'Sit and Go' tournaments at
PartyPoker.com and that it had the easiest players to
win money from, we considered that it did not support
the claim that PartyPoker.com was their preferred or
favourite site. We noted the survey respondents had not
been asked to name their preferred or favourite site.
Because we had not seen evidence to support the likely
interpretation of the claim, we concluded that it could
mislead," the advertising regulator concluded, banning
any further use of the material as breaches of CAP Code
clauses 3.1 (Substantiation), 7.1 (Truthfulness) and
19.1.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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