15 November 2024, 04:42
By Furniture News Sept 04, 2024

Blinds retailer chastised for advert copy

The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has chastised 247 Home Furnishings (trading as 247 Blinds) for copy on its website which was likely to cause serious offence to some people.

A website for 247Blinds seen on 8th July 2024 included the text: “Made-to-Measure Quality Blinds…WITHOUT HAVING YOUR EYES OUT! […] Blind envy starts here …” alongside an image of a person with paint splatters and stars over their eyes.

The complainant, who was severely sight impaired, challenged whether the ad was likely to cause serious or widespread offence.

247 Home Furnishings stated that the term “having your eyes out” was widely recognised as an expression used to signify someone’s eyes popping out in disbelief to show unfavourable surprise when faced with something that was overpriced. It said its intention was to convey that customers would be pleasantly surprised by their prices and so would not “have their eyes out” when they saw them.

While the company acknowledged that the play on words “Quality Blinds” may have been seen as in poor taste, it believed that most people would have found it humorous, rather than seriously offensive.

This was the only complaint 247 Home Furnishings had received, and it had been viewed on its website by 182,000 users and had been shown on various online platforms, resulting in over 1.7 million impressions during this period. The campaign finished at the end of July and would no longer be available online.

The ASA upheld the complaint, stating: "The CAP Code required marketers to ensure that ads did not contain anything that was likely to cause serious or widespread offence, with particular care to be taken to avoid causing offence on the grounds of various protected characteristics, including disability.

"We acknowledged that the claim “Quality Blinds” was intended as a humorous play on words related to the advertiser’s product, window blinds, and the verb, to blind. We also acknowledged that the claim “Having your eyes out” was an expression known to some people to mean your eyes popping out in disbelief at something, for example, a high price.

"However, we considered that all the elements of the ad seen together, the play on words, “Quality Blinds”, the use of the expression “WITHOUT HAVING YOUR EYES OUT!” and the image of the person with stars and paint splatters covering their eyes, would be understood as a reference to blindness, and had the effect of making light of the disability. We therefore concluded that the ad was likely to cause serious offence to some people.

"The ad breached CAP Code (Edition 12) rule 4.1 (Harm and Offence). The ad must not appear again in the form complained of. We told 247 Home Furnishings Ltd t/a 247 Blinds to ensure that their future ads did not cause serious or widespread offence, particularly on the grounds of disability."


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