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Direct Line ad banned

by Kevin Rose
10 April 2013
Direct Line ad banned
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Direct Line has had an internet video advert banned by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA).

A video on www.directline.com in the section marked “Direct Line TV Ads” featured people holding and opening umbrellas. The voice-over stated, “Last year we helped 17,346 people swap wellies back to slippers, when their house flooded and helped find alternative accommodation for those who needed it.”

During that time, small on-screen text stated “Escape of water (17,132) and Flood (214) claims paid by Direct Line between 01.07.11 and 30.06.12”. The voice-over continued, “And right now we’re offering all new customers up to 50% off contents when they buy building insurance. Take the Direct Line”.

The complainant challenged whether the ad was misleading, because she understood that properties which had been flooded in the last 10 years would not be insured by the advertisers.

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Direct Line said their underwriting criteria for new customers generated a decline if the property to be insured had suffered a flood in the last 10 years. They stated that the ad referred to customers who were already insured with Direct Line and had been considered acceptable when taken on as new business, and whom they had helped when they made a flood claim.

They said the ad referred to ‘flood’ in the broadest sense of the word, meaning, for example, an escape of water, such as pipes or a bath overflowing, and weather-related flood. They stated that customers understood water-related damage of any kind to property to be a ‘flood’, regardless of what caused it. They added that the on-screen text gave a breakdown of the claims and gave the statistics for both ‘escape of water’ and ‘flood’. They said the highest number of claims paid out related to escape of water.

They stated that, whilst their business might restrict the risks they took for flood cover, that was not the case with escape of water, although all risks were subject to meeting underwriting criteria. They considered that the ad was not showcasing a benefit of their cover that was not available to new business and therefore did not consider that the ad was misleading.

The ASA noted that the ad stated “Last year we helped 17,346 people swap wellies back to slippers, when their house flooded and helped find alternative accommodation for those who needed it” and, in light of the high profile press coverage of the UK’s major flooding problems in recent years, considered that most consumers would understand that claim to relate to such large scale flooding incidents, where major damage had been caused and where properties had been rendered uninhabitable.

On that basis, the ASA considered that most consumers would infer that the insurance cover advertised by Direct Line to new customers would include compensation for major flooding incidents and providing alternative accommodation, as well as compensation for the more common ‘escape of water’ incidents, such as pipes bursting or a bath overflowing.

The ad regulator understood that properties which had suffered a flood in the last decade would not be eligible for cover and noted that the ad did not state that exemption. It considered that some consumers would assume that, if their property had already suffered major flooding, that was likely to impact on the cost of their insurance premiums or their ability to find insurance cover for flooding.

However, the ASA also considered that a key message of the ad was that Direct Line had a proven record of offering help to those who had suffered major flooding and, consequently, it would not be unreasonable for consumers to assume that Direct Line’s cover would include those who were at a high risk of flooding or had previously suffered major flooding.

Therefore, because the ad highlighted the help Direct Line had provided to those who had suffered major flooding and promoted that aspect as a specific feature of their insurance cover, the ASA considered that new customers, including those who had suffered from flooding in the past, would understand that Direct Line could cover them in the case of major floods.

Because the ASA noted that the cover was not available to those who had suffered flooding to their property in the past 10 years, it concluded that the ad was likely to mislead.

The ad breached CAP Code (Edition 12) rules 3.1, 3.3 (Misleading advertising) and 3.9 (Qualification) and Direct Line was told that the ad must not appear again in its current form.

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