FTC rules require disclosure of promotional relationships

Not that long ago, blogs were a mysterious animal that most reputable companies shied away from, an untrustworthy medium populated by cranks in their pyjamas. But at some point over the past year or two, blogs became mainstream, and companies like Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard and even Wal-Mart started turning to them for some good, old-fashioned “word of mouth” advertising. Reaching out to bloggers with offers of gifts seemed like an easy way to do this, and many bloggers were eager to accept — but not all of them disclosed their relationships with the company whose products they had received.

Doing this is now mandatory, the Federal Trade Commission said in newly released rules governing advertising and promotional material on the Internet. The new amendments are the first updates to the FTC’s guide for advertisers since 1980. According to the new rules, a post by a blogger who is paid cash or receives a gift is considered an endorsement and the relationship must be disclosed. According to the FTC, messages posted on Twitter are covered as well.

Richard Cleland, a staff attorney at the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, told a Fortune blog: “We’re required to update our rules periodically to ensure that they address relevant issues in the marketplace. Social media has become a relevant marketing force, so we started looking at it.” The FTC official said that the commission was concerned about so-called “pay-per-post” websites, where bloggers receive cash or in-kind gifts in return for positive blog reviews.

“The issue here,” he says, “is whether, if the consumer knew of the relationship between the advertisers and the blogger, would it affect the credibility of the blogger’s statements?” Cleland told the Wall Street Journal that the FTC looks at it “from the perspective of the consumer and the principle being that a consumer has the right to know when they’re being pitched a product. It doesn’t matter whether it’s an email or Twitter or someone standing on a street corner.”

One of the companies that likely gave rise to the FTC’s concerns is Izea — formerly known as PayPerPost. The startup’s business involves helping companies with products or services they want to market find bloggers who are willing to write about them in return for payment. Although Izea didn’t initially require bloggers to disclose these payments anywhere, it changed its rules after much criticism from other bloggers such as TechCrunch. Izea founder Ted Murphy says that his company is working with the FTC on standards for disclosure regarding both paid blog posts and Twitter messages.

Not everyone is enamored of the FTC’s new moves, however. Jeff Jarvis, who is both a blogger and a journalism professor at the City University of New York, says that while he despises companies like Izea that pay bloggers for their opinions, he sees the guides as “dreadful overreach that will drag a lot of innocent people into a bureaucratic dragnet.” Among other things, Jarvis says that he is concerned that the rules only apply to bloggers and Twitter, but other forms of publishing are considered able to regulate themselves. Dan Gillmor, director of the Knight Centre for Digital Media Entrepreneurship, said on Twitter that the new rules “are big-brotherish in extreme, unworkable and downright dangerous.”

As a number of observers have noted, however – and as Robert Cleland himself admitted in several interviews about the new rules – the FTC doesn’t have a huge staff available for enforcement, and certainly doesn’t have the kind of staffing it would need to police the entire blogosphere or Twittersphere. As a result, it will likely rely on customer complaints to bring cases forward for investigation.

Be an agent of change in the newsroom

So I moderated a panel last night entitled “What’s Next For News,” as part of the kickoff for Wordstock, an annual event put on by the Ryerson University School of Journalism in Toronto. As you can see from the photo (taken by Wayne MacPhail), I played middleman between veteran social-media skeptic Andrew Keen and “media futurist” Clay Shirky. Among other things, we talked about the rise of the Wikipedia model as a source of journalism — something I (and Clay) believe is still underappreciated by many media outlets — as well as the pressure for transparency and the need for jounalists to become brands. If you want to review some of what we talked about, Bill Doskoch collected a tweet-stream about the event, and my former Globe and Mail colleague Joyce Smith did a great live-blog at J-source.ca. Thanks to another former Globe colleague — Ryerson School of Journalism head Paul Knox — and the rest of the faculty, including Jeffrey Dvorkin and Ann Rauhala, for asking me to come and moderate the panel. I like and admire both Andrew and Clay, so it was fun to be up there chatting with them, and in fact I could easily have continued for another hour or so. I hope everyone who attended enjoyed it as much as I did.

Although I heard a lot of positive things about the panel (thanks to everyone who came up and said hello), there were some comments from a few of the journalism students in attendance that Shirky and Keen didn’t provide much in the way of concrete suggestions for those entering the field. And it’s true that the discussion was pretty theoretical for most of the panel — although Keen did say that young journalists should focus on creating their own personal brand as a way to succeed. He also said that he would recommend young people entering the field look elsewhere for work rather than throw their lot in with the mainstream media.

As I told one young journalist at the after party, I wouldn’t agree with Andrew that no one should work in traditional media — although if they choose to work for a startup or a Web-only venture, then more power to them. What I would recommend to any young journalist is that if you get a job with any tradtional media outlet, then be an agent of change in that newsroom. Don’t be content to go along for the ride — try as much as you can to do new things, to experiment, to push the boundaries. Become the person who is known for being adventurous, the one everyone else goes to when they are looking to try something different. As bleak as some parts of the industry look, there has never been a better time for innovation and experimentation.