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The Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) issued the amended Telemarketing Sales
Rule (TSR) on January 29, 2003. Like the
original TSR issued in 1995, the amended Rule
gives effect to the Telemarketing and Consumer
Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act. This legislation
gives the FTC and state attorneys general law
enforcement tools to combat telemarketing fraud,
give consumers added privacy protections and
defenses against unscrupulous telemarketers, and
help consumers tell the difference between
fraudulent and legitimate telemarketing.
One significant amendment to
the TSR prohibits calling consumers who have put
their phone numbers on the National Do Not Call
Registry. Another change covers the solicitation
of charitable contributions by for-profit
telemarketers.
Other key provisions:
require disclosures of specific information
prohibit misrepresentations
limit when telemarketers may call consumers
require transmission of Caller ID
information
prohibit abandoned outbound calls, subject
to a safe harbor
prohibit unauthorized billing
set payment restrictions for the sale of
certain goods and services
require that specific business records be
kept for two years
The Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) enforces the Telephone Consumer
Protection Act (TCPA), which also regulates
telemarketing. The FCC recently amended its TCPA
regulations, which touch on many of the topics
covered by the TSR. For more information about
the TCPA, contact the FCC at http://www.fcc.gov/.
The TSR and the TCPA regulations cover nearly
all telemarketing with similar rules.
Many states also have laws
regulating telemarketing. The FTC and the FCC
are working with states to harmonize Do Not Call
requirements at state and federal levels for a
unified national system enabling “one-stop”
service for consumers, as well as businesses
seeking to comply with the requirements. For
information about a particular state’s laws,
contact the state attorney general’s office or
another state consumer protection agency.
If your telemarketing
campaigns involve any calls across state
lines—whether you make outbound calls or receive
calls in response to advertising— you may be
subject to the TSR’s provisions. This guide
describes the types of organizations and
activities that are subject to the TSR and
explains how to comply. It is the FTC staff ’s
view of the law’s requirements and is not
binding on the Commission.
If you have questions
after reading this guide,
contact:
Division of Marketing
Practices Bureau of Consumer
Protection Federal Trade
Commission Washington, DC 20580 (202)
326-3737
The
Amended TSR at a Glance
Briefly stated, the amended
TSR:
supplements the company-specific Do Not Call
provision of the original Rule with new
provisions based on a National Do Not Call
Registry.
creates an “established business
relationship” exception to the National Do Not
Call provisions so that a company may call a
consumer with whom it has such a relationship,
even if the consumer’s number is on the
Registry.
allows a company to call a consumer who has
given the company express written permission to
call, even if the consumer’s number is on the
Registry.
prohibits denying or interfering with a
consumer’s Do Not Call request.
prohibits misuse of Do Not Call lists.
covers charitable solicitations placed by
for-profit telefunders. The National Do Not Call
Registry provisions do not apply to for-profit
telefunders; rather, for-profit telefunders must
keep their own Do Not Call lists and honor
donors’ requests not to be called.
requires sellers and telemarketers to obtain
express verifiable authorization when payment is
made by methods other than credit card or debit
card, and limits the use of the written
confirmation method.
requires sellers and telemarketers offering
credit card loss protection plans to disclose
specific information.
prohibits misrepresentations in the sale of
credit card loss protection plans.
requires sellers and telemarketers making an
offer that involves a negative option feature to
disclose specific information.
prohibits misrepresentations about negative
options.
specifies that all required disclosures be
made truthfully.
requires additional disclosures for prize
promotions.
prohibits disclosing or receiving, for
consideration, unencrypted consumer account
numbers.
requires sellers and telemarketers to get a
consumer’s express informed consent before
submitting the consumer’s billing information
for payment.
sets out guidelines for what constitutes
evidence of express informed consent in
transactions involving “pre-acquired account
information” and “free-to-pay conversion”
offers.
requires telemarketers, for purposes of
Caller ID, to transmit the telephone number,
and, when made available by the telemarketer’s
telephone company, the telemarketer’s name.
prohibits telemarketers from abandoning any
outbound telephone call, subject to a safe
harbor.
extends the applicability of most provisions
of the Rule to “upselling.”
requires telemarketers and sellers to
maintain records of express informed consent and
express agreement.
narrows certain exemptions.
clarifies that facsimile transmissions,
electronic mail, and similar methods of delivery
are direct mail for purposes of the direct mail
exemption.
Charities and For-Profit
Telemarketers Calling on Their Behalf
The USA PATRIOT Act, passed in
2001, brought charitable solicitations by
for-profit telemarketers within the scope of the
TSR. As a result, most of the TSR’s provisions
now are applicable to
“telefunders”—telemarketers who solicit
charitable contributions.
Telefunders are required
to:
make certain prompt disclosures in every
outbound call.
get express verifiable authorization if
accepting payment by methods other than credit
or debit card.
maintain records for 24 months.
comply with the entity-specific Do Not Call
requirements, but are exempt from the National
Do Not Call Registry provision.
Telefunders are prohibited
from:
making a false or misleading statement to
induce a charitable contribution.
making any of several specific prohibited
misrepresentations.
engaging in credit card laundering.
engaging in acts defined as abusive under
the TSR, such as calling before 8 a.m. or after
9 p.m., disclosing or receiving consumers’
unencrypted account information, and denying or
interfering with a consumer’s right to be placed
on a Do Not Call list.
Who
Must Comply with the Amended TSR?
The amended TSR regulates
“telemarketing”— defined in the Rule as “a plan,
program, or campaign . . . to induce the
purchase of goods or services or a charitable
contribution” involving more than one interstate
telephone call. (The FCC regulates both
intrastate and interstate calling. More
information is available from http://www.fcc.gov/.)
With some important exceptions, any businesses
or individuals that take part in “telemarketing”
must comply with the Rule. This is true whether,
as “telemarketers,” they initiate or
receive telephone calls to or from consumers, or
as “sellers,” they provide, offer to
provide, or arrange to provide goods or services
to consumers in exchange for payment. It makes
no difference whether a company makes or
receives calls using low-tech equipment or the
newest technology—such as voice response units
(VRUs) and other automated systems. Similarly,
it makes no difference whether the calls are
made from outside the United States; so long as
they are made to consumers in the United States,
those making the calls, unless otherwise exempt,
must comply with the TSR’s provisions. If the
calls are made to induce the purchase of goods,
services, or a charitable contribution, the
company is engaging in “telemarketing.”
Certain sections of the Rule
apply to individuals or companies
other than “sellers”
or “telemarketers” if these individuals or
companies provide substantial assistance or
support to sellers or telemarketers. The Rule
also applies to individuals or companies that
provide telemarketers with unauthorized access
to the credit card system.
Exemptions to the Amended
TSR
Some types of businesses,
individuals, and activities are outside the
FTC’s jurisdiction, and therefore, not covered
by the TSR. Certain calls or callers are exempt
from the Rule, too. Moreover, some of the
exemptions from the original Rule have been
narrowed in the Amended Rule. As a result, some
calls or callers may be completely exempt or
they may be partially exempt—that is, they may
have to comply with some of the Rule’s
provisions. The following sections explain the
coverage of the Rule and the exemptions. Be
aware that the FCC also regulates telemarketing
practices; its jurisdiction extends to some
entities and activities that are not subject to
regulation by the FTC. For more information
about the FCC’s rules, visit http://www.fcc.gov/.
Some Types of Businesses
and Individuals
Some types of businesses are
not covered by the Rule even though they conduct
telemarketing campaigns that may involve some
interstate telephone calls to sell goods or
services. These three types of entities are not
subject to the FTC’s jurisdiction, and not
covered by the Rule:
banks, federal credit unions, and federal
savings and loans.
common carriers—such as long-distance
telephone companies and airlines—when they are
engaging in common carrier activity.
non-profit organizations—those entities that
are not organized to carry on business for their
own, or their members’, profit.
These types of entities are
not covered by the Rule because they are
specifically exempt from the FTC’s jurisdiction.
Nevertheless, any other individual or company
that contracts with one of these three types of
entities to provide telemarketing services must
comply with the Rule.
Examples:
A nonbank company that contracts with a bank
to provide telemarketing services on the bank’s
behalf is covered.
A non-airline company that contracts with an
airline to provide telemarketing services on
behalf of the airline is covered.
A company that is acting for profit is
covered by the Rule if it solicits charitable
contributions on behalf of a non-profit
organization.
Keep in mind that a company
soliciting a charitable contribution is not
required to comply with the Rule’s National Do
Not Call Registry provisions.
Under the provisions of the
Telemarketing Act, a number of entities and
individuals associated with them that sell
investments and are subject to the jurisdiction
of the Securities and Exchange Commission or the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission are not
covered by the Rule, even if they engage in a
plan, program, or campaign to sell through
interstate telephone calls.1 These entities
and individuals are covered by the FCC’s
telemarketing rules. For more information, visit
http://www.fcc.gov/.
Coverage of the Business of
Insurance Is Limited
The McCarran-Ferguson Act
provides that the FTC Act, and by extension, the
TSR, are applicable to the business of insurance
to the extent that such business is not
regulated by state law. Whether the
McCarran-Ferguson exemption removes
insurance-related telemarketing from coverage of
the TSR depends on the extent to which state law
regulates the telemarketing at issue and
whether enforcement of the TSR would conflict
with, and effectively supersede, those state
regulations. Unlike the jurisdictional
exemptions for banks and non-profit
organizations, which do not extend to
third-party telemarketers making calls on their
behalf, in the case of the telemarketing of
insurance products and services, the TSR does
not necessarily apply simply because the
campaign is conducted by a third-party
telemarketer.
Some Types of Calls
Some types of calls
also are not covered by the Rule, regardless of
whether the entity making or receiving the call
is covered. These include:
unsolicited calls from consumers.
calls placed by consumers in response to a
catalog.
business-to-business calls that do not
involve retail sales of nondurable office or
cleaning supplies.
calls made in response to general media
advertising (with some important exceptions).
calls made in response to direct mail
advertising (with some important exceptions).
Exemptions
Explained
Unsolicited Calls
from Consumers Any call from a
consumer that is not placed in response to a
solicitation by the seller, charitable
organization, or telemarketer is exempt from
coverage. Because the consumer initiates the
call without any inducement from the seller or
telemarketer, the call is not considered part of
a telemarketing plan, program, or campaign
conducted to sell goods or services or to induce
a charitable contribution. Some examples include
calls to:
make hotel, airline, car rental, or similar
reservations.
place carry-out or restaurant delivery
orders.
contact a department store or charity
without prompting from an advertisement or
solicitation.
obtain information or technical support.
Consumer calls in
response to a recorded message: Calls
are not considered “unsolicited” when placed by
consumers in response to a recorded
message—whether left on the consumer’s answering
machine, or presented when the consumer answers
under the call abandonment “safe harbor.”
Upsells: If a
seller or telemarketer “upsells” a
consumer during an unsolicited call initiated by
the consumer, the upsell is covered by the
Rule.
Most Calls Made in
Response to a Catalog Generally,
the Rule does not apply to calls placed by
consumers in response to a mailed catalog if the
catalog:
contains a written description or
illustration of the goods or services offered
for sale;
includes the business address of the seller;
includes multiple pages of written material
or illustrations;
has been issued at least once a year; and
the catalog seller doesn’t solicit consumers
by telephone, but only receives calls initiated
by consumers in response to the catalog, and
during the calls, only accepts orders without
additional solicitation. The catalog seller may
provide the consumer with information about—or
attempt to sell the consumer— other items in the
same catalog that prompted the consumer’s call
or in a similar catalog.
If a telemarketer offers goods
or services that are not in the catalog that
prompted the consumer’s call—or in a
substantially similar catalog—the sales
transaction is covered by the Rule. Regardless
of the TSR’s application to a particular sale,
catalog merchandise sales also are covered by
the FTC’s Mail or Telephone Order Merchandise
Rule (16 C.F.R. Part
435).
Business-to-Business
Calls, Unless They Involve the Sale of
Nondurable Office or Cleaning
Supplies Most phone calls
between a telemarketer and a business are exempt
from the Rule. But business-to-business calls to
induce the retail sale of nondurable office or
cleaning supplies are covered. Examples of
nondurable office or cleaning supplies include
paper, pencils, solvents, copying machine toner,
and ink—in short, anything that, when used, is
depleted, and must be replaced. Such goods as
software, computer disks, copiers, computers,
mops, and buckets are considered durable because
they can be used again.
Although sellers and
telemarketers involved in telemarketing sales to
businesses of nondurable office or cleaning
supplies must comply with the Rule’s
requirements and prohibitions, the Rule
specifically exempts them from the recordkeeping
requirements and from the National Do Not Call
Registry provisions. These sellers and
telemarketers do not have to create or keep any
particular records, or purge numbers on the
National Do Not Call Registry from their call
lists to comply with the Rule.
Most Calls
Responding to General Media
Advertising The Rule generally
does not apply to consumer calls made in
response to general media advertising,
including: television commercials; infomercials;
home shopping programs; print advertisements in
magazines, newspapers, the Yellow Pages, or
similar general directories; radio ads; banner
ads on the Internet; and other forms of mass
media advertising and solicitation.
Nevertheless, if a seller or telemarketer
“upsells” a consumer during a call initiated by
the consumer, the upsell is covered by the
Rule. In addition, the Rule
does cover calls from
consumers in response to general media
advertisements relating to business
opportunities not covered by the Franchise Rule,
credit card loss protection, credit repair,
recovery services, advance-fee loans,
or investment opportunities.2
Some Calls
Responding to Direct Mail Advertising Are
Exempt Direct mail advertising
includes, but is not limited to, postcards,
flyers, door hangers, brochures, “certificates,”
letters, email, facsimile transmissions, or
similar methods of delivery sent to someone
urging a call to a specified telephone number
regarding an offer of some sort. For purposes of
the Rule, “direct mail” is not limited to
messages sent via conventional mail delivery or
private couriers. The exemption for calls
responding to direct mail advertising that meets
the Rule’s requirements is available both to
telemarketers soliciting sales of goods or
services and to telefunders soliciting
charitable contributions.
Sales solicitations:
Generally, consumer calls in response
to a direct mail solicitation that clearly,
conspicuously, and truthfully makes the
disclosures required by the Rule are exempt from
the Rule. These disclosures are: cost and
quantity; material restrictions, limitations or
conditions; any “no-refund” policy; and, if the
offer includes a prize promotion, credit card
loss protection, or a negative option feature,
the information about any of those elements of
the offer required by the Rule. If you are a
seller or telemarketer who uses direct mail, you
may use this exemption only if your direct mail
solicitation messages make the disclosures
required by Section 310.3(a)(1) of the Rule
clearly, conspicuously, and truthfully.
Charitable
solicitations: Consumer calls in
response to direct mail messages that solicit
charitable contributions benefit from the
limited direct mail exemption, provided they
contain no material misrepresentation about the
nature, purpose, or mission of the entity on
whose behalf the contribution is requested; the
tax deductibility of any contribution; the
purpose for which the contribution will be used;
the percentage or amount of the contribution
that will go to a charitable organization or
program; any material aspect of a prize
promotion; or a charitable organization or
telemarketer’s affiliations, endorsements, or
sponsorships.
The exemption is for sales
calls elicited by direct mail advertising that
truthfully provides a
consumer with the specific information required
under the Rule. In the case of charitable
solicitation calls elicited by direct mail
advertising, the exemption applies to direct
mail advertising that conscientiously avoids the
prohibited misrepresentations.
There is no exemption for
calls responding to any direct mail advertising
that relates to credit card loss protection,
credit repair, recovery services, advance-fee
loans, investment opportunities, prize
promotions, or business opportunities other than
those covered by the Franchise Rule. This is
regardless of whether the advertisement makes
the disclosures required by the Rule and
contains no misrepresentations.
Also, any instances of
upselling following an exempt transaction are
covered by the Rule.
“Upselling” is not
exempt. Upselling occurs when a
seller or telemarketer tries to sell additional
goods or services during a single phone call,
after an initial transaction.
Upsell transactions are covered
by the TSR. Even if the initial
transaction is exempt because it is an
unsolicited call from a consumer, a response to
a general media advertisement or certain direct
mail solicitations, or an outbound non-sales
call (say, a customer service call), any upsell
following the initial transaction is subject to
all relevant provisions of the Rule.
Examples:
A consumer calls a department store to
inquire about the price of a microwave oven.
Because the call is not the result of a
solicitation by the seller, the initial inquiry
is exempt from the Rule. If the seller tries to
upsell a refrigerator during the same call, the
upsell transaction is subject to the Rule.
A consumer calls in response to an
infomercial advertising a home gym product for
sale. If the home gym product is the only item
offered during the call, the call is exempt. But
if the telemarketer offers a free-trial offer to
a cookbook series after the sales pitch for the
home gym, the cookbook offer constitutes a
separate transaction and is an upsell covered by
the TSR. If both the home gym product and the
cookbook series are prominently featured in the
general media advertisement, transactions
involving either or both products fall within
the general media exemption. But if the cookbook
is visible on the set of the infomercial,
mentioned only in passing, or mentioned as an
afterthought, pitching the cookbook during the a
consumer’s call about the home gym product is
considered an upsell and is not exempt from the
Rule.
Partial Exemptions
Some calls are exempt from
most provisions of the TSR, but not all. These
include:
calls relating to the sale of 900-Number
pay-per-call services.
calls relating to the sale of franchises or
certain business opportunities.
calls that are part of a transaction that
involves a face-to-face sales presentation.
Calls
Relating to the Sale of 900-Number
Services
The sale of 900-Number
pay-per-call services, which is subject to the
FTC’s 900-Number Rule, is exempt from most
provisions of the TSR. Still, to comply with the
TSR, sellers of pay-per-call services must
not:
call any number on the National Do Not Call
Registry or on that seller’s Do Not Call list.
deny or interfere with a person’s right to
be placed on any Do Not Call Registry.
call outside permissible calling hours.
abandon calls.
fail to transmit Caller ID information.
threaten or intimidate a consumer or use
obscene language.
cause any telephone to ring or engage a
person in conversation with the intent to annoy,
abuse, or harass the person called.
Partial coverage under the TSR
does not affect the obligation of sellers and
providers of 900-Number Services to comply with
the 900-Number Rule (16 C.F. R. Part
308).
Calls
Relating to the Sale of Franchises or Business
Opportunities
Calls relating to the sale of
franchises or business opportunities that are
covered by the FTC’s Franchise Rule (16 C.F.R.
Part 436) are exempt from most provisions of the
TSR. To comply with the TSR, sellers and
telemarketers selling franchise or business
opportunities subject to the Franchise Rule must
not:
call numbers that are on the National Do Not
Call Registry or on that seller’s Do Not Call
list.
deny or interfere with a person’s right to
be placed on any Do Not Call Registry.
call outside permissible calling hours.
abandon calls.
fail to transmit Caller ID information.
threaten or intimidate a consumer or use
obscene language.
cause any telephone to ring or engage a
person in conversation with the intent to annoy,
abuse, or harass the person called.
Partial coverage under the TSR
does not affect the obligation of franchisors to
comply with the Franchise Rule.
Calls
that are Part of a Transaction Involving a
Face-to-Face Sales
Presentation
The TSR generally does not
cover telephone transactions where the sale of
goods or services or a charitable contribution
is not completed until after a face-to-face
presentation by the seller or charitable
organization, and the consumer is not required
to pay or authorize payment until then. This
exemption is for transactions that begin with a
face-to-face sales presentation and are
completed in a telephone call, as well as those
that begin with a telephone call and are
completed in a face-to-face sales
presentation.
The key to the face-to-face
exemption is the direct and personal contact
between the buyer and seller. The goal of the
Rule is to protect consumers against deceptive
or abusive practices that can arise when a
consumer has no direct contact with an invisible
and anonymous seller other than the telephone
sales call. A face-to-face meeting provides the
consumer with more information about—and direct
contact with— the seller, and helps limit
potential problems the Rule is designed to
remedy.
Nevertheless, even in
transactions where there is a face-to-face
meeting, telemarketers must not:
call numbers on the National Do Not Call
Registry or on that seller’s Do Not Call list.
deny or interfere with a person’s right to
be placed on any Do Not Call Registry.
call outside permissible calling hours.
abandon calls.
fail to transmit Caller ID information.
threaten or intimidate a consumer or use
obscene language.
cause any telephone to ring or engage a
person in conversation with the intent to annoy,
abuse, or harass the person called.
If the transaction is
completed in a face-to-face meeting at the
consumer’s home or away from the seller’s place
of business, the seller must comply with the
FTC’s Cooling Off Rule (16 C.F.R. Part 429).
Requirements for Sellers
and Telemarketers
Sellers and Telemarketers
Must Disclose Material Information
The Rule requires sellers and
telemarketers, whether making outbound calls to
consumers or receiving inbound calls from
consumers, to provide certain material
information before the consumer pays for the
goods or services that are the subject of the
sales offer. Material
information is information that would likely
affect a person’s choice of goods or services or
the person’s decision to make a charitable
contribution. More simply, it is information a
consumer needs to make an informed decision
about whether to purchase goods or services or
make a donation. Sellers and telemarketers may
provide the material information either orally
or in writing. Failure to provide any of the
required information truthfully and in a “clear
and conspicuous” manner, before the consumer
pays for the goods or services offered, is a
deceptive telemarketing act or practice that
violates the Rule and subjects a seller or
telemarketer to a civil penalty of $11,000 for
each violation.
When making outbound calls, a
telemarketer must promptly disclose certain
types of information to consumers orally in the
sales presentation.
Before a Consumer Pays:
Before sellers and telemarketers get a
consumer’s consent to purchase—or persuade a
consumer to send full or partial payment by
check, money order, wire, cash, or any other
means —they must provide the consumer with the
information required by Section 310.3(a)(1) of
the Rule. Sellers and telemarketers also must
provide the required information before asking
for any credit card, bank account, or other
information that they will or could use to
obtain payment. In addition, sellers and
telemarketers must provide the required
information before requesting, arranging for, or
asking a consumer to request or arrange for a
courier to pick up payment for the goods or
services offered. Couriers include Federal
Express, DHL, UPS, agents of the seller or
telemarketer, or any other person who will go to
a consumer’s home or other location to pick up
payment for the goods or services being
offered.
When sellers and telemarketers have
pre-acquired account information, they must
provide the required disclosures before the
customer provides express informed consent.
Pre-acquired account information is any
information that enables you to cause a charge
against a consumer’s account without obtaining
the account number directly from the consumer
during the transaction for which the consumer
will be charged.
Clear and Conspicuous: Clear
and conspicuous means that information is
presented in a way that a consumer will notice
and understand. The goal is that disclosures be
communicated as effectively as the sales
message. When written, clear and conspicuous
information generally is printed in a type size
that a consumer can readily see and understand;
that has the same emphasis and degree of
contrast with the background as the sales offer;
and that is not buried on the back or bottom, or
in unrelated information that a person wouldn’t
think important enough to read. When a seller or
telemarketer makes required disclosures in a
written document that is sent to a consumer and
follows up with an outbound sales call to the
consumer, the disclosures are considered clear
and conspicuous only if they are sent close
enough in time to the call so that the consumer
associates the call with the written
disclosures.When disclosures are oral, clear and
conspicuous means at an understandable speed and
pace and in the same tone and volume as the
sales offer.
What Information Must
Sellers and Telemarketers Provide to
Consumers?
The law requires that when
sellers and telemarketers offer to sell goods or
services, they must provide the consumer with
material information about the offered goods
or services necessary to avoid misleading
consumers. The term
material means likely
to affect someone’s choice of goods or services
or decision to make a charitable contribution,
or someone’s conduct with regard to a purchase
or donation.
The Rule specifies six broad
categories of material information that sellers
and telemarketers must provide to consumers:
1.
Cost and Quantity
The Rule requires sellers and
telemarketers to disclose the total costs to
purchase, receive, or use the offered goods or
services. While disclosing the total number of
installment payments and the amount of each
payment satisfies this requirement, the number
and amount of such payments must correlate to
the billing schedule that will be implemented.
For example, the Rule’s requirements would not
be met if you were to state the product’s cost
per week if the consumer has to pay installments
on a monthly or quarterly basis. The Rule also
requires you to tell a consumer the total
quantity of goods the consumer must pay for and
receive. You must provide both these items of
material information to the consumer before the
consumer pays for the goods or services that are
the subject of the sales offer. You may provide
this material information orally or in writing,
as long as the information is clear and
conspicuous.
Sometimes, though, the total
cost and quantity are not fixed when the initial
transaction takes place, but, instead, are
determined over time. For example, in a
negative option plan,
like those offered by some record or book clubs,
the consumer may agree to purchase a specific
number of items over a specified time period.
The consumer receives periodic announcements of
the selections; each announcement describes the
selection, which will be sent automatically and
billed to the consumer unless the consumer tells
the company not to send it. Similarly, a
continuity plan offers
subscriptions to collections of goods. During
the course of the plan, the consumer can choose
to purchase some or all the items offered in the
collection. Consumers who agree to buy an
introductory selection also agree to receive
additional selections on a regular schedule
until they cancel their subscription to the
plan.
Both negative option and
continuity plans are structured to provide
consumers the opportunity to purchase a series
of products over time. The cost of the plan as a
whole is determined by the number and type of
items in the series the consumer decides to
accept, and at the time of the initial sales
offer, neither the seller nor the consumer
necessarily knows how much product the consumer
will purchase, or the total cost of the
products.
To comply with the Rule, a
seller or telemarketer offering a negative
option or a continuity plan must disclose the
total costs and quantity of goods or services
that are part of the initial offer; the total
quantity of additional goods or services that a
consumer must purchase over the duration of the
plan; and the cost, or range of costs, to
purchase each additional good or service
separately. Some negative option plans are
subject to the FTC’s Negative Option Rule.
Cost and Quantity
Disclosure in the Marketing of Credit
Products:If sellers and
telemarketers are offering credit products
subject to the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) or
Regulation Z, compliance with the credit
disclosure requirements and the timing of the
disclosures mandated by TILA or Regulation Z
constitute compliance with the total cost and
quantity disclosure requirements of the TSR with
respect to the credit instrument. Nevertheless,
the cost and quantity of any goods or services
purchased with that credit also must be
disclosed.
2.
Material Restrictions, Limitations, or
Conditions
The Rule requires sellers and
telemarketers to disclose all material
restrictions, limitations, or conditions to
purchase, receive, or use goods or services that
they are offering to the consumer. Material
information is information that a consumer needs
to make an informed purchasing decision. A
material restriction, limitation, or condition
is one that, if known to the consumer, would
likely affect the decision to purchase the goods
or services offered; to purchase them at the
offered price; to purchase them from that
particular seller; or to make a charitable
contribution. Examples of material information
that must be disclosed include:
a requirement that a consumer pay for
offered goods or services by cashier’s check,
money order, or in cash.
in the case of an offer of a credit card, a
requirement that a consumer make a deposit in
order to receive and use the card offered (that
is, that the credit card is a secured card).
in the case of a vacation certificate, a
restriction, limitation, or condition that
prevents a purchaser from using the certificate
during the summer; or that requires a purchaser
to make reservations a year in advance to travel
using the certificate; or that requires the
consumer to incur expenses beyond the price of
the certificate to redeem the certificate for a
vacation.
the underlying illegality of goods or
services, such as the illegality of foreign
lottery chances.
Sellers and telemarketers may
disclose orally or in writing information about
material restrictions, limitations, or
conditions to purchase, receive, or use the
goods or services being offered, as long as the
information is clear and conspicuous and
disclosed before the consumer pays.
3.
No-Refund Policy
If there’s a policy of
honoring requests for refunds, cancellations of
sales or orders, exchanges, or re-purchases,
sellers and telemarketers must disclose
information about the policy only if they make a
statement about the policy during the sales
presentation. If the sales presentation includes
a statement about such a policy, it must also
include a clear and conspicuous disclosure of
all terms and conditions of the policy that are
likely to affect a consumer’s decision on
whether to purchase the goods or services
offered.
If the seller’s policy is that
“all sales are final” — that is, no
refunds, cancellations of sales or orders, or
exchanges or re-purchases are allowed —the Rule
requires you to let consumers know before they
pay for the goods or services being offered. You
may give this information to consumers orally or
in writing, and the information must be clear
and conspicuous.
4.
Prize Promotions
A prizepromotion includes (1) any sweepstakes
or other game of chance, and (2) any
representation that someone has won, has been
selected to receive, or may be eligible to
receive a prize or purported prize. A
prize is anything offered and given to
a consumer by chance.
For the element of chance to
be present, all that is necessary under the Rule
is that the consumer is guaranteed to receive an
item, and, at the time of the offer, the
telemarketer does not identify the specific item
that the person will receive. For example, say
you send a solicitation promising recipients
that they will receive one of four or five
listed items but you do not tell recipients
which of the listed items they will receive. In
that case, any item the consumer receives is a
prize, and the solicitation is a prize
promotion.
A seller or telemarketer that
offers a prize promotion must provide consumers
with several items of information before the
consumer pays for any goods or services being
offered. This information may be given to
consumers orally or in writing, and the
information must be clear and conspicuous. You
must tell consumers:
the odds of winning the prize(s). If the
odds can’t be calculated in advance because they
depend on the number of people who enter the
promotion, for example, you must tell that to
consumers, along with any other factors used to
calculate the odds.
that they can participate in the prize
promotion or win a prize without buying anything
or making any payment, and that any purchase or
payment will not increase the chances of
winning. When offering a prize promotion in
outbound calls, you must disclose this
information orally and promptly. A legitimate
prize promotion does not require any purchase or
payment of money for a consumer to participate
or win. If a purchase or payment of money is
required for eligibility for a prize, it is not
a prize promotion; it is a lottery, which is
generally unlawful under federal and state
lottery laws.
how they can enter the prize promotion
without paying any money or purchasing any goods
or services. This disclosure must include
instructions on how to enter, or an address or
local or toll-free telephone number where
consumers can get the no-purchase/no-payment
entry information.
about any material costs or conditions to
receive or redeem any prize. For example, if one
of the offered prizes is a "vacation,” but the
recipient must pay for her own accommodations,
that’s a cost or condition that is likely to
affect the consumer’s response to the offer and
therefore, must be disclosed.
5.
Credit Card Loss
Protection
A seller or telemarketer
offering a credit card loss protection plan—one
that claims to protect, insure, or otherwise
limit a consumer’s liability in the event of
unauthorized use of a customer’s credit
card—must disclose the limits on a cardholder’s
liability under federal law for unauthorized use
of a credit card (15 U.S.C. § 1643). Since the
law limits cardholder liability for unauthorized
use—for example, when a credit card is lost or
stolen—to no more than $50, disclosure of this
information to consumers will help ensure that
they have the material information necessary to
decide whether the protection plan offered is
worth the cost.
6.
Negative Option
Features
The term “negative option
feature” is used in the Rule. It is when the
seller interprets the consumer’s silence, or
failure to take an affirmative action to reject
goods or services or cancel an agreement as
acceptance of the offer. One type of negative
option offer is a “free-to-pay conversion” offer
(also known as a “free-trial offer”), where
customers receive a product or service for free
for an initial period and then have to pay for
it if they don’t take some affirmative action to
cancel before the end of the period. Other types
of negative option features include continuity
plans and other arrangements where consumers
automatically receive and incur charges for
shipments in an ongoing series unless they take
affirmative action to stop the shipment.
Under the TSR, any seller or
telemarketer whose offer of a product or service
involves a negative option feature must
truthfully, clearly, and conspicuously disclose
three pieces of information:
the fact that the customer’s account will be
charged unless he or she takes an affirmative
action—such as canceling—to avoid the charge.
the date(s) on which the charge(s) will be
submitted for payment.
the specific steps the customer must take to
avoid the charges.
While the best practice is to
provide an actual date on which payment will be
submitted, it is acceptable to disclose an
approximate date if you don’t—or can’t—know the
actual date, provided the approximate date gives
the consumer reasonable notice of when to expect
the debit or charge. As for disclosing how the
consumer can avoid charges, it is not sufficient
under the Rule to disclose that a consumer would
have to call a toll-free number to cancel
without disclosing the number.
Prompt Disclosures in
Outbound Telemarketing Calls
Promptly:
“Promptly” is defined by Webster’s Dictionary as
“performed at once or without delay.” For
purposes of the Rule, “promptly” means before
any sales pitch is given and before any
charitable solicitation is made. Required
information about a prize promotion must be
given before or when the prize offered is
described.
Oral
Disclosures in Outbound Sales Calls and
Upselling Transactions
An outbound
call is a call initiated by a
telemarketer to a consumer. The Rule requires
that a telemarketer making an outbound sales
call promptly disclose
the following four items of information
truthfully, clearly, and conspicuously:
The identity of
the seller. The seller is the
entity that provides goods or services to the
consumer in exchange for payment. The identity
of the telemarketer, or person making the call,
need not be disclosed if it is different from
the identity of the seller. If the seller
commonly uses a fictitious name that is
registered with appropriate state authorities,
it is fine to use that name instead of the
seller’s legal name.
That the purpose
of the call is to sell goods or
services. The Rule requires that
the purpose of the call be disclosed truthfully
and promptly to consumers. How you describe or
explain the purpose of the call is up to you, as
long as your description is not likely to
mislead consumers. For example, it would be
untruthful to state that a call is a “courtesy
call,” if it’s a sales call.
The nature of the
goods or services being
offered.This is
a brief description of items you are offering
for sale.
In the case of a
prize promotion, that no purchase or payment is
necessary to participate or win, and that a
purchase or payment does not increase the
chances of winning. If the
consumer asks, you must disclose—without delay—
instructions on how to enter the prize promotion
without paying any money or purchasing any goods
or services.
These same disclosures must be
made in an upselling
transaction if any of the information in these
disclosures is different from the initial
disclosures (if the initial transaction was an
outbound call subject to the Rule) or if no
disclosures were required in the initial
transaction, such as a non-sales customer
service call. For example, in an external
upsell, where the second transaction in a
single telephone call involves a second seller,
you must tell the consumer the identity of the
second seller—the one on whose behalf the upsell
offer is being made. On the other hand, in an
internal upsell, where additional goods
or services are offered by the same seller as
the initial transaction, no new disclosure of
the seller’s identity is necessary because the
information is the same as that provided in the
initial transaction.
Multiple Purpose Calls. Some
calls have more than one purpose. They may
involve the sale of goods or services and
another objective, like conducting a prize
promotion or determining customer satisfaction.
They may involve a charitable solicitation
combined with a prize promotion. In any multiple
purpose call where the seller or telemarketer is
planning to sell goods or services in at least
some of the calls, four disclosures must
be made promptly—that is, during the first part
of the call before the non-sales portion of the
call. Similarly, in any multiple purpose call
where the telemarketer is planning to solicit
charitable contributions in at least some of the
calls, two disclosures must be made
promptly—that is, during the first part of the
call, before the noncharitable solicitation part
of the call.
Example
Say a seller calls a consumer to determine
whether he or she is satisfied with a previous
purchase and then plans to move into a sales
presentation if the consumer is satisfied. Since
the seller plans to make a sales presentation in
at least some of the calls (the seller plans to
end the call if the consumer is not satisfied),
four disclosures must be made promptly
during the initial portion of the call and
before inquiring about customer
satisfaction.
However, a seller may make calls to welcome
new customers and ask whether they are satisfied
with goods or services they recently purchased.
If the seller doesn’t plan to sell anything to
these customers during any of these calls, the
four oral disclosures are not required. That’s
the case even if customers ask about the
sellers’ other goods or services, and the seller
responds by describing the goods or services.
Because the seller has no plans to sell goods or
services during these calls, the disclosures are
not
required.
Oral
Disclosures in Outbound Calls to Solicit
Charitable
Contributions
Telefunders must make two
prompt oral disclosures clearly and
conspicuously:
The identity of
the charitable organization on whose behalf the
solicitation is being made. The
charitable organization is the entity on whose
behalf a charitable contribution is sought. The
identity of the telemarketer, or person making
the call, need not be disclosed. If the
charitable organization commonly uses a
fictitious name that is registered with
appropriate state authorities, that name may be
disclosed instead of the charitable
organization’s legal name.
That the purpose
of the call is to solicit a charitable
contribution.The
Rule requires that the purpose of the call be
disclosed promptly to consumers. How the purpose
of the call is described or explained is up to
you, as long as your description or explanation
is not likely to mislead consumers.
How does a for-profit company
that telemarkets for a non-profit organization
make the required oral disclosures?
When a for-profit company makes
interstate calls to solicit charitable
contributions for a non-profit organization, the
for-profit telemarketer must make the required
prompt disclosures for charitable solicitation
calls. The company must identify the entity on
behalf of whom the charitable solicitation is
made and state that the purpose of the call is
to solicit a charitable contribution. However,
if a for-profit company solicits charitable
contributions on behalf of a charity and offers
goods or services that are of more than nominal
value — a book, magazine subscription, or
perhaps a membership — to induce donations, the
required oral disclosures for both sales and
charitable contributions must be made. “Nominal”
means a value less than the amount of any
contribution being solicited. In a situation
where the goods or services offered are of more
than nominal value, stating the name of the
non-profit organization on whose behalf the call
is being made is sufficient. This disclosure
also would satisfy the requirement that the
entity on whose behalf a charitable contribution
is being solicited be identified.
Examples:
“I am calling on behalf of [name of
non-profit organization] to offer you a
subscription to the organization’s newsletter,
which [description of newsletter] and to ask for
a donation to help support the work of [name of
non-profit organization].”
“I am calling for [name of non-profit
organization] to seek your support. For a
donation of $25 or more, [name of non-profit
organization] will extend to you a one-year
membership, which entitles you to [description
of the membership]. Your donation will help us
to continue the [non-profit organization’s]
important work . .
.”
Misrepresentations are
Prohibited
The Rule prohibits sellers and
telemarketers from making false or misleading
statements to induce anyone to pay for goods or
services or make a charitable contribution. For
example:
you cannot falsely claim that you need a
consumer’s bank account number or credit card
number only for identification purposes, when,
in fact, you will use the number as payment for
the goods or services offered.
a seller of precious metals cannot induce
anyone to invest by falsely claiming that the
seller offers the metals at or near wholesale
price.
it would be illegal under the Rule to
solicit a charitable contribution by claiming
that 100 percent of the funds collected would
benefit the stated charity, when only 30 percent
of the money goes to the charity.
In addition, the Rule
prohibits sellers and telemarketers from
misrepresenting specific categories of
information about a telemarketing transaction
that are likely to affect a consumer’s decision
to purchase the goods or services offered. The
Rule also prohibits both express and implied
misrepresentations. Sellers and telemarketers
cannot circumvent the Rule by creating a
false impression in a consumer’s mind through
the artful use of half-truths or misleading or
incomplete information.
In
sales transactions, the Rule prohibits
misrepresentations about the
following:
1. Cost and
Quantity
The Rule prohibits sellers and
telemarketers from misrepresenting the total
costs to purchase, receive, or use the goods or
services offered, or the quantity of goods or
services offered at the stated price. For
example, you may not tell consumers that they
may purchase a magazine subscription for three
years at $1.50 a month, when the subscription is
available at that price for one year only.
2. Material
Restrictions, Limitations, or
Conditions
The Rule prohibits sellers and
telemarketers from misrepresenting any material
restriction, limitation, or condition to
purchase, receive, or use goods or services
offered to the consumer. For example, you may
not falsely claim that a hotel certificate may
be used any time at any major hotel chain in the
country, when it can be used only at certain
times or at a limited number of hotels.
3. Performance,
Efficacy, or Central
Characteristics
The Rule prohibits sellers and
telemarketers from misrepresenting any material
aspect of the performance, efficacy, nature, or
central characteristics of the goods or services
offered to the consumer. For example, it is a
violation of the Rule to claim falsely that:
a water processor offered for sale can
eliminate all known contaminants from tap water.
a service offered by the seller can improve
a person’s credit rating.
a machine will operate properly without
maintenance.
precious metals outperform other types of
investments.
a seller can recover money lost by the
consumer in a previous telemarketing
transaction.
a purchaser of a business venture can earn
“more money in a week than you now earn in a
year” or achieve specific levels of income.
4. Refund,
Repurchase, or Cancellation
Policies
The Rule prohibits sellers and
telemarketers from misrepresenting any material
aspect—one that likely would have an effect on
the onsumer’s purchasing decision—of the nature
or terms of the seller’s refund, cancellation,
exchange, or repurchase policies. For example,
the Rule prohibits you from claiming that
“our policy is to make our customers
happy—if at any time you’re not absolutely
delighted, just send the merchandise back