• The Advertising Regulatory Board has upheld a complaint against Boxer over its BoxerCom free data promotion.
  • The ruling mirrors an earlier finding against The SPAR Group Ltd over undisclosed SIM card requirements tied to mobile rewards.
  • The twin decisions send a clear warning that “free” offers must disclose all material conditions upfront.

Retailers are increasingly using free mobile data as a hook to attract spending. However, two recent rulings have made it clear that if access to that reward depends on joining a retailer-linked mobile network or buying a SIM card, consumers must be told plainly and upfront.

That principle was first tested in a complaint against The SPAR Group Ltd, where shoppers were led to believe they could access advertised data rewards, only to discover after the fact that participation required a SPAR mobile SIM card.

The Advertising Regulatory Board (ARB) found that the condition was material and should have been clearly disclosed at the outset, as it determined whether consumers could actually access the promoted benefit. Now, Boxer has found itself on the wrong side of the same line.

The ARB has upheld a complaint against Boxer Superstores over its “Get 1GB data FREE with BoxerCom” promotion, finding that the retailer failed to make it sufficiently clear that the advertised free data was only accessible through a BoxerCom SIM card.

The promise that drew shoppers in

Boxer’s promotion informed customers who spent R500 or more on advertised products and swiped their Boxer Rewards Club Card that they would receive 1GB of free data. The headline claim, “Get 1GB data FREE with BoxerCom”, carried the kind of clear promotional punch designed to encourage spending and reward loyalty.

To the ordinary consumer, the wording suggested that they should spend the required amount, swipe the loyalty card, and receive free data. However, the offer was not as simple as it appeared.

To use the data, customers needed access to BoxerCom, Boxer’s own mobile service, through a BoxerCom SIM card. Consumers who were not already subscribers could not simply redeem the reward. They first needed to obtain the correct SIM card, which evidence before the ARB showed was sold for 99 cents.

Boxer’s defence falls short

Boxer resisted the complaint and argued that there was no hidden cost in the promotion. The company stated that once a customer spent the qualifying amount and swiped their Boxer Rewards Club Card, a promotional 1GB BoxerCom data voucher number was automatically printed on the till slip.

Boxer maintained that no additional charge was imposed for issuing that voucher and that the advertisement, therefore, accurately reflected the promotion. But that response did not address the core consumer concern.

The issue was never whether Boxer charged shoppers for the voucher itself. The issue was whether shoppers were clearly told what they needed in order to actually use the reward being advertised. On that question, the ARB found Boxer’s position unsustainable. It said, “It is therefore clear that the offer is only open to customers with Boxer SIM cards.”

The ARB also accepted evidence that BoxerCom SIM cards were being sold for 99 cents. It found that for non-subscribers, access to the reward could therefore require additional spending beyond the qualifying grocery purchase.

It recorded, “This SIM card is mandatory to access the offered free data, hence the complainant’s assertion that there is an extra cost.” That finding struck at Boxer’s claim that there was no hidden barrier to accessing the reward.

Why ordinary shoppers mattered

One of the most important parts of the ruling was the ARB’s focus on how an ordinary consumer, not a loyal BoxerCom user, would understand the advertisement.

The ARB accepted that existing BoxerCom subscribers may well have understood immediately that the offer was tied to Boxer’s mobile network service. But advertising law does not judge a promotion by how insiders read it. It looks at how a reasonable consumer encountering the advertisement would understand it.

That broader audience included first-time shoppers, casual customers, and people unfamiliar with BoxerCom. For them, the ARB found the wording was ambiguous. It held, “The claim ‘Get 1GB data FREE with BoxerCom’ might be ambiguous to the Advertiser’s new customers and to those not familiar with its brand.”

It then made the practical point that exposed the flaw in Boxer’s advertising: “The hypothetical reasonable consumer would understand that any Boxer customer can get the free data, regardless of their service provider.”

That was not true in reality, and only BoxerCom users, or those willing to become BoxerCom users, could benefit. That is exactly the kind of undisclosed qualification consumer advertising rules are designed to prevent.

A simple fix that was never used

The ARB noted that Boxer could easily have avoided the complaint by adding only a few clarifying words. It found that wording such as “Get 1GB data FREE with BoxerCom SIM card” would have immediately signalled to consumers that the reward depended on using a BoxerCom SIM. It also noted that if acquiring that SIM card involved a cost, that too needed to be disclosed prominently.

The Advertising Regulatory Board upheld the complaint and instructed its members not to accept any Boxer advertisement carrying the claim “Get 1GB data FREE with BoxerCom” unless it is qualified to make clear that the free data is only accessible if used in conjunction with a BoxerCom SIM card.

Conviction.co.za

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Multiple award-winner with passion for news and training young journalists. Founder and editor of Conviction.co.za

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