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Fairy Liquid

Turns out Fairy Liquid DOES last twice as long as its rivals

A complaint from its rival Persil ended with the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority led to the ruling.

IT TURNS OUT that Fairy Liquid really does last twice as long as rival brands – and that’s not just according to Proctor & Gamble.

That’s according to a ruling by the Advertising Standards Authority – and comes following a complaint by rival brand Persil.

Fairy Liquid ads have been saying since 1950 that the washing up liquid lasts twice as long as other washing up liquids.

A new complaint from rivals Persil saw the company complain to the UK’s ASA that the claim in the Fairy ad that it lasted ‘twice as long’ was “misleading and could not be substantiated”.

It also questioned ads which compared Fairy Liquid to an unknown rival brand, with Persil asking if the ads represented a fair comparison.

They said that they believed the ads were misleading because they omitted material information such as the concentration of the liquid and the size and price of the bottle. Its three complaints were not upheld.

The result

The ASA investigated the TV ad, magazine ad and a digital poster, after which it said the campaign was not misleading.

It also stated that the size of the Fairy 433ml bottle on show was actually smaller than the two 500ml rival brands on show.

The ASA noted the ads “showed images of the advertised product beside an equals sign and two unbranded bottles of washing-up liquid”.

The ads also made clear that Fairy lasted twice as long as the next best-selling brand and that the next best-selling brand was based on AC Nielsen volume share data, which we understood identified that brand as Persil.

It considered consumers “would understand from the shape and comparative size of the bottles that the images were of the 433 ml Fairy bottles and two 500 ml Persil bottles”.

“In that context, we considered consumers would interpret the ads to mean that a standard 433 ml bottle of Fairy lasted as long as two standard 500 ml bottles of Persil when used in conditions representative of everyday use.”

The ASA also sought expert advice on the robustness of the evidence provided by Procter & Gamble, and the expert “considered the test reflected the practices of consumers and demonstrated that Fairy lasted at least twice as long as Persil”.

It considered that the claims that Fairy lasted twice as long as the next best-selling brand had been substantiated on this basis.

Brands

The ASA said that the ads also made clear that the next best-selling brand was based on AC Nielsen volume share data, which we understood identified that brand as Persil, and considered that customers would understand the comparison was between the two products.

It considered the images made clear that a standard 433 ml bottle of Fairy lasted as long as two standard 500 ml bottles of Persil.

It also considered that information about the concentration of the liquid and the size and price of the bottle “was not material information in relation to ads that made clear that the basis of the comparison was the mileage of the products”.

It concluded the ads were not in breach.

Read: Iceland forced to withdraw ad that claimed Irish food authority was “unaccredited”>

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    Mute jimbo
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    Feb 3rd 2012, 8:06 AM

    Online shopping is the way forward

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    Mute Stephen Murphy
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    Feb 3rd 2012, 9:26 AM

    What they don’t look at in these stats is that for a lot of online deals sites such as Groupon, you have to enter an email address just to get on to the website and see the deals – while it’s still a ‘signup’, it might not have the same level of purchasing intent.

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    Mute Charles Maltha
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    Feb 4th 2012, 8:06 AM

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    Mute Séa Graham
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    Feb 3rd 2012, 8:00 AM

    the journalist a few articles back might nite be happy with the use if a woman in the picture to sell the story

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    Mute Séa Graham
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    Feb 3rd 2012, 8:02 AM

    Not. stupid tucking autocorect

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    Mute B7584
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    Feb 3rd 2012, 11:09 AM

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    Mute Aydo
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    Feb 3rd 2012, 2:50 PM

    Online deal sites = shit people dont want so we’ll sell it cheap

    Fact

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