Skip to content

Don’t risk making product claims

Team Meeting In Creative Office

If you are in a direct sales or network marketing company, your policies and procedures forbid product claims. Don’t believe me? Go read them. Trust me, it’s in there. Especially if you sell any type of product that is supposed to go in or on the body, this is huge for you. Companies and their distributors (yes, you read that right—distributors, too) have been fined millions of dollars for making improper product claims. This applies to all kinds of things: what you post in a blog, customer testimonials, statements on your Facebook page—all of it.

And the thing about social media is that the alphabet soup of all those regulatory bodies (FTC, FDA, etc.) can easily find out when you’re making those claims. Even if you are absolutely convinced that your product cured your cancer, you can’t say it. Why not?

First, let’s talk about what a product claim actually is. Essentially, you can’t state that your product can diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease, unless your company has a scientific study to back it up. If your company does have that study, your product is classified as a drug and has the proper labeling. And those studies cost millions of dollars.

So, what can you say? You can say that your product can “help maintain or support a system of the body,” so long as a scientific study has been done to prove it, and the statement has been filed with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) within 30 days of when the claim is made. How will you know if that has happened? If your company has printed it first or told you that you can say something. If the statement has not been filed with the FDA, then that statement does not get the “safe harbor” protection created for supplements, and your product requires drug labeling. And drug approval is a process that requires millions of dollars.

Let’s put this in terms of what you do daily. If you make a statement about your product that has not been filed with the FDA, and the FDA finds out, it could require your company to stop selling that product and seize all the stock of that product. Seriously. And then your product can’t help anybody.

And we haven’t even started talking about the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice, because they can get into the act too. If the FTC determines that there is no competent or reliable scientific evidence to support your claims (as in, no scientific studies done), then there can be uber fines, and they may also require your company to take all the profits they’ve received from the sale of that product, and give it to the FTC to be used for “consumer redress.” Don’t think it can happen? In one case, according to Reese, not only was a company fined millions, but the top distributor was also fined $1 million, and the second distributor was required to pay $500,000 in fines.

So what about customer testimonials? You may have a client who is absolutely convinced that it was your product that solved his or her problem (be it obesity cure, hair growth, fewer wrinkles, dandruff treatment, removed acne scars, health issues, etc.).

The issue here is that from the consumer standpoint, the consumer doesn’t have enough evidence (according the the FDA and FTC) that your product is what actually cured the problem. Is there evidence that the product was absolutely what cured the problem? Was the customer doing anything else about the problem at the same time? As a consumer (or distributor for your company) you just don’t have enough information. Chances are you’ve done other things that also contributed to the cure. You need science to back up the causal relationships. You have to go through clinical trials that drug companies go through (which cost millions of dollars) to eliminate all the other possibilities that may have contributed to the cure. You need scientifically substantiated information. Anecdotal evidence is not enough.

Your best bet with any testimonials you want to publish (and no matter where you post these testimonials online, it’s considered “published”) from your customers is to run them by your company first. Your company has to have a scientific study to back the testimonial up before you’re allowed to publish it. If they don’t have one, no matter how sure you are that it’s accurate, you simply cannot use it. And how it’s phrased matters, too. If your product is not classified as a drug, the testimonial has to fall within the “structure/function” area we talked about earlier, which is where you have scientific evidence that your product supports the healthy function of a body system, rather than curing anything. Your company really needs to review everything in order to confirm that it’s in compliance.

To stay safe, don’t allow your customers to publish testimonials on your sites either (neither your own nor your company’s). This includes the company Facebook Page. If they put them there, and they don’t comply with what you’re allowed to say, take them down. You can be held liable for everything published to a site designed to promote the company. Your best bet is to have a policy listed anywhere the public can comment or provide testimonials in public, and then be sure to police it, taking down anything that is not in compliance with the law.

And here’s another layer to this—in December, the FTC published new guidelines with regards to product testimonials. You used to be able to say that results were not typical when presenting a testimonial, if it was true but was not the average results with your product. Now, if a testimonial is outside generally typical results, you must also disclose what typical results are as part of the testimonial. What can be generally expected by the population? Studies have to be very carefully designed so you can make appropriate disclosures. So if you don’t have typical weight loss results studies for sedentary women in their 40s, you can’t publish a testimonial from a sedentary woman in her 40s that lost vast amounts of weight with your product. That’s the law.

Direct sellers that need to be most careful with this are those that sell products that are put into or on the body. Most typically, this includes people that sell health and wellness products, weight loss products, and cosmetics/skin care.

I’m telling you all about this today because with social media, we sometimes think that what we say falls under the same umbrella as things we say in person. Now, I’m not saying that you should ever make unsubstantiated product claims. But, when those claims are published anywhere online, they can go much further than you think. There is written proof that you’ve said them. And it can harm you, your company, and every distributor in your organization.

Don’t be the person that prevents your company from selling an incredible product. Stick within the realm of what you’re allowed to say, so everyone can enjoy the benefits of your product line. Everyone will be better off in the long run.

 

you may also like

compensation consulting for mlm companies

We offer data-driven compensation plan design & analysis

LEARN MORE

MLM.com Newsletter

Get our e-mail newsletter, with MLM.com articles & online exclusives, delivered to your inbox each week.

Please enter a valid email address.
Something went wrong. Please check your entries and try again.