FTC Guidance for Online Influencers

Tips from FTC staff about what triggers the need for a disclosure and offers examples of both effective and ineffective disclosures

Ian Balina avatar
Written by Ian Balina
Updated over a week ago

The Federal Trade Commission has released a new publication that lays out the agency’s guidelines for when and how online influencers must disclose sponsorships to their followers.

The new guide, “Disclosures 101 for Social Media Influencers,” provides influencers with tips from FTC staff about what triggers the need for a disclosure and offers examples of both effective and ineffective disclosures. For example, it suggests the words influencers might use, as well as where in their social posts a disclosure should appear.

The guide and accompanying videos underscore that the responsibility to make disclosures about endorsements lies with the influencer. The guide outlines the various ways that an influencer’s relationship with a brand would make disclosures necessary, and it reminds influencers that they cannot assume that followers are aware of their connections to brands.

The guide includes tips for when and how influencers should tell their followers about a relationship. For example, it suggests the words influencers might use, as well as where in their social posts a disclosure should appear.

The new publication summarizes the FTC’s existing guidance in this area, including the FTC’s Endorsement Guides and a 2017 question-and-answer document produced by staff.

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