Lord & Taylor settles charges of deceptive Instagram posts

Luxury department store chain paid influencers to post pictures of a dress

Lord & Taylor will settle U.S. charges that it deceived customers when it paid for Instagram posts and also a website article to promote a new clothing line without disclosing they were advertisements.

The department store chain gave 50 popular trendsetters on Instagram a free dress and paid them as much as $4,000 to post a picture of them wearing it, the Federal Trade Commission said Tuesday. The posts reached more than 11 million Instagram users and the dress sold out, according to the FTC.

Lord & Taylor also paid the pop-culture magazine Nylon to post an article online about the new line.

“Consumers have the right to know when they’re looking at paid advertising,” said FTC’s director of consumer protection bureau, Jessica Rich.

Lord & Taylor said it never tried to deceive customers and that it corrected the posts and article when the FTC raised the issue a year ago.

Nylon declined to comment.

In settling the charges, Lord & Taylor is prohibited from “misrepresenting” paid ads in the future. If it does, the department store chain could pay civil penalties, the FTC said.

Lord & Taylor has 50 stores around the country. It is owned by Hudson’s Bay Company of Toronto, which also owns Saks Fifth Avenue.

See all comments Recent Comments
takeaflyer

Just to clarify for your readers, HBC was purchased by NRDC Equity Partners in 2008, which owns Lord & Taylor and Saks Fifth Avenue.

Wednesday, March 16 @ 7:52 am |

Add a comment

You must be to comment.

Advertising Articles

BC Children’s Hospital waxes poetic

A Christmas classic for children nestled all snug in their hospital beds.

Teaching makes you a better marketer (Column)

Tim Dolan on the crucible of the classroom and the effects in the boardroom

Survey says Starbucks has best holiday cup

Consumers take sides on another front of Canada's coffee war

Watch This: Iogo’s talking dots

Ultima's yogurt brand believes if you've got an umlaut, flaunt it!

Heart & Stroke proclaims a big change

New campaign unveils first brand renovation in 60 years

Best Buy makes you feel like a kid again

The Union-built holiday campaign drops the product shots

123W builds Betterwith from the ground up

New ice cream brand plays off the power of packaging and personality

Sobeys remakes its classic holiday commercial

Long-running ad that made a province sing along gets a modern update