How Do Companies Manage Marketing and Promotions Compliance Risks?

مجال الممارسة:Corporate

المؤلف : Donghoo Sohn, Esq.



Marketing and promotions compliance involves adhering to federal, state, and local laws that govern how businesses advertise products, run promotional campaigns, and represent their offerings to consumers.

Compliance failures can trigger regulatory enforcement, consumer litigation, and reputational damage. Courts and agencies scrutinize claims, disclosures, and material terms closely, and procedural missteps in documentation often undermine a business's defense posture. This article addresses the principal federal and state rules governing marketing claims, substantiation requirements, disclosure obligations, and practical compliance strategies.

Contents


1. What Laws Govern Marketing and Promotions in the United States?


Federal law, particularly the Federal Trade Commission Act and the Lanham Act, sets baseline standards for truthfulness, non-deceptive advertising, and substantiation of claims. State consumer protection statutes and New York's General Business Law Section 349 layer additional requirements on top of federal rules. Industry-specific regimes, such as those covering alcohol, pharmaceuticals, financial services, and telemarketing, impose specialized disclosure and approval obligations.

The FTC enforces against unfair or deceptive acts in commerce, while state attorneys general and private litigants pursue claims under state consumer protection laws. Our firm's marketing and promotions law practice helps businesses identify which rules apply to their industry and promotional structure. Compliance begins with mapping applicable statutes and regulations to your specific campaign before creative or media placement occurs.



2. What Triggers Regulatory Scrutiny of a Marketing Campaign?


Regulatory agencies and private litigants typically focus on whether a claim is material to consumer purchase decisions, whether it is supported by adequate substantiation, and whether disclosures are clear and conspicuous. Vague terms like natural, eco-friendly, or clinically proven often invite challenge because they lack precise legal definition and may overstate product benefits. Contests and sweepstakes that fail to clearly state material terms, eligibility restrictions, or odds of winning create both FTC and state attorney general exposure.

Substantiation defects are among the most common triggers. If a business claims a product reduces wrinkles by 50%, the FTC will expect competent and reliable scientific evidence before the claim appears in any medium. Endorsements and testimonials that do not disclose material connections between the endorser and the brand, or that make unsubstantiated claims, violate FTC Endorsement Guides. Delayed or incomplete disclosure of terms, fees, or conditions in digital or email promotions can violate both federal and state law, particularly when small print or buried disclaimers obscure material facts.



3. How Should a Business Document Substantiation for Marketing Claims?


Substantiation documentation must exist before a claim is made public. Retroactive collection of evidence after a campaign launches is a weak defense and often signals bad faith to regulators. Create a substantiation file for each material claim that includes the type of evidence relied upon, the date the evidence was obtained, and the expert or institution providing it. For product-performance claims, document the testing methodology, sample size, statistical significance, and any limitations the underlying research contains.

A written substantiation memo, prepared by internal marketing or with counsel, that identifies which claims are supported creates a clear record of the business's intent and diligence. If a claim cannot be substantiated, do not make it. If a claim is marginally supported, consider narrowing or qualifying the language to match the evidence. Preserve all communications between marketing, product development, and legal teams regarding claim development and approval, as these records demonstrate the business's compliance mindset and can mitigate penalties if enforcement occurs.



What Role Does Substantiation Play in Defending against Ftc Enforcement?


The FTC burden in an enforcement action is to establish that a claim is deceptive, meaning it is likely to mislead a reasonable consumer and is material to purchase decisions. If the business has contemporaneous substantiation, the burden shifts to the FTC to prove the evidence was inadequate or the claim went beyond what the evidence supported. Courts have held that a business's good-faith reliance on competent substantiation is a strong defense, even if the claim later proves incorrect.

Absence of substantiation at the time of the claim is treated as evidence of deception. The FTC does not need to prove the claim is false, only that it lacked a reasonable basis when made. Timely production of substantiation files during discovery significantly affects settlement posture and damages exposure. Document preservation and organized filing of substantiation records before any hint of enforcement inquiry is therefore a critical protective measure.



4. What Disclosure Requirements Apply to Online and Email Promotions?


Online promotions must comply with the Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing (CAN-SPAM) Act for email campaigns, which requires clear identification of the sender, a functioning unsubscribe mechanism, and accurate subject lines. Sweepstakes and contests must disclose material terms, entry method, eligibility, prize description, odds of winning, and selection method clearly and conspicuously before or at the point of entry. Terms buried in fine print or requiring multiple clicks do not satisfy the clear and conspicuous standard under FTC guidance.

Social media promotions face heightened scrutiny because disclosures must be visible on the platform itself. Linking to a separate webpage for material terms may not be sufficient if the link is not immediately obvious. New York's General Business Law requires that material terms of a promotion be stated in a manner a reasonable consumer would understand before deciding to participate. Our advertising and marketing law team routinely reviews online campaign copy to identify disclosure gaps before launch.



How Do New York Courts Interpret Clear and Conspicuous in Promotional Disclosures?


New York courts apply a reasonable consumer standard: would an ordinary person, reviewing the advertisement as presented, understand the material terms without undue effort? If terms require scrolling, clicking hidden links, or reading fine print that contradicts larger headlines, courts find the disclosure inadequate. The placement and prominence of disclaimers relative to the main claim matter significantly. A disclaimer in 8-point font at the bottom of a page does not cure a large, bold, unqualified claim above it. Material limitations and conditions should be stated near or within the headline claim, not hidden in secondary text.



5. What Are Common Defenses and Compliance Strategies?


Affirmative defenses to a deceptive advertising claim include proof of adequate substantiation, evidence that the claim is not material to consumer purchase decisions, or demonstration that the claim is not likely to deceive a reasonable consumer. A business can also argue that any misleading element was corrected promptly upon discovery, though this defense is stronger if the correction was made voluntarily rather than in response to a regulator's demand.

Proactive compliance strategies include establishing a pre-launch review process in which all marketing claims are vetted by product, legal, and compliance teams before any media placement. Maintain a substantiation matrix that maps each claim to supporting evidence and identifies gaps. Use clear, qualified language: may help, studies suggest, and in laboratory conditions are safer than absolute assertions. For endorsements, require written disclosure agreements that document any material connections and ensure endorsers have a reasonable basis for any claims they make. Conduct periodic audits of active campaigns to identify claims that lack current substantiation.



How Should a Business Respond to a Regulatory Inquiry or Cease-and-Desist Letter?


Do not ignore a cease-and-desist letter or regulatory inquiry. Silence or delay can be construed as admission or bad faith. Engage counsel immediately to assess the allegations, gather internal documents, and prepare a written response that addresses each claim. The response should acknowledge the regulator's concern, explain the basis for the challenged claim, produce substantiation if available, and propose corrective measures if necessary. Most regulatory agencies expect a substantive response within 10 to 30 days. A prompt, well-documented response that demonstrates the business's compliance effort can prevent formal enforcement action and preserve settlement leverage.

Compliance CheckpointKey Action
Pre-Launch Claim ReviewVerify each material claim against substantiation and document the review.
Disclosure PlacementEnsure material terms appear clearly and conspicuously; avoid relying on fine print.
Endorsement AgreementsObtain written consent and material-connection disclosures from endorsers before public use.
Record PreservationMaintain substantiation files and approval emails for at least three to five years.
Regulatory ResponseRespond promptly to inquiries with counsel; do not assume silence is safe.


6. What Forward-Looking Steps Should a Business Prioritize Now?


Audit your current marketing materials against the compliance framework outlined above. Identify claims that lack substantiation, disclosures that are unclear or buried, and endorsements that lack material-connection disclosures. Establish a documentation protocol for all future campaigns, assigning responsibility for substantiation collection, claim vetting, and legal review before any spend. Review your terms and conditions, privacy policy, and promotional terms to ensure they align with current FTC guidance and state law.

If you have received a regulatory inquiry or notice, or if you are planning a major promotional campaign in a regulated industry, consult with counsel early to map the applicable rules and build compliance into the campaign structure from the outset. Proactive compliance reduces the risk of costly enforcement action, consumer litigation, and brand damage. The cost of legal review before launch is invariably lower than the cost of remediation, litigation defense, or regulatory penalties after the fact.


01 Jun, 2026


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