NARB ProgramBackgrounds

National Advertising Review Board

The National Advertising Review Board (NARB) is the appellate body for the U.S. system of advertising industry self-regulation. Five-member NARB panels hear cases appealing an NAD or CARU decision and provide independent industry peer review, ensuring truthfulness and accuracy in national advertising and helping promote voluntary compliance of its decisions—a key pillar of industry self-regulation.

Program Impact

NARB, established in 1971 as a fair and impartial appellate body, reviews appealed NAD or CARU decisions. Nominated by various leading organizations in the advertising industry, NARB members are selected for their stature and experience in their fields. 

 

 

Truth & Transparency

When a competitor’s advertising harms consumer trust or threatens a company’s reputation and market share, the advertising self-regulatory system creates a level-playing field for business and helps ensure consumers receive truthful and accurate advertising.

Compliance

After a decision, NARB or the challenger can check in on whether the advertiser has made appropriate modifications to its advertising and has 10 days to respond. The case is closed if there is a good faith effort to bring their advertising into compliance.

Non-Compliance

In cases of lack of good faith efforts to modify or discontinue advertising as a result of a NARB decision, NARB will refer the case to an appropriate government agency, usually the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
 

For the last 50 years in the advertising industry, companies have held each other to a higher standard. In response to the pressures and criticisms of consumerism that had mounted during the previous decade, in 1971 the advertising industry established the National Advertising Division (NAD) and National Advertising Review Board (NARB), the U.S. mechanism of independent self-regulation that has stood the test of time and technological innovation.

 

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Guidelines & Procedures


Any advertiser or challenger has the right to appeal NAD’s decision to NARB. An advertiser has an automatic right of appeal. A challenger must request permission to appeal from the NARB chair and explain why it believes there is a substantial likelihood NARB would come to a different conclusion on a case than NAD. 

 

News & Blog

Press Release

BBB National Programs Announces 98 Distinguished Panel Pool Members for 2024 National Advertising Review Board

McLean, VA – January 9, 2024 – BBB National Programs today announced the 98 panel pool members of the 2024 National Advertising Review Board (NARB), the appellate body for the U.S. advertising industry’s system of self-regulation. 

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Press Release

BBB National Programs Announces 91 Distinguished Panel Pool Members for 2023 National Advertising Review Board

McLean, VA – January 10, 2023 – BBB National Programs today announced the 91 panel pool members of the 2023 National Advertising Review Board, the appellate body for the U.S. advertising industry’s system of self-regulation, selected for their stature and experience in their fields.

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Harmful Stereotyping in Advertising Must Not Be a “Forever Problem”

Feb 26, 2021, 09:00 AM by La Toya Sutton, Attorney and Kat Dunnigan, Senior Attorney, National Advertising Division
Though the annual celebration of Black History Month is drawing to a close, the plethora of issues raised by the study of Black history must always remain top of mind. For those of us who work in truth in advertising at NAD, we are paying very close attention to the issues of diversity and stereotyping, as presented in various forms of advertising.

As the annual celebration of Black History Month draws to a close, the focus on Black history raises issues that should remain top of mind.

For those of us who work in truth in advertising at BBB National Programs’ National Advertising Division, we are paying close attention to the issues of diversity and stereotyping, as presented in various forms of advertising. As the UK Advertising Standards Authority chief executive Guy Parker told the BBC, lack of diversity and use of harmful stereotypes may “restrict the choices, aspirations, and opportunities of children, young people, and adults and these stereotypes can be reinforced by some advertising… put simply, we found that some portrayals in ads, over time, play a part in limiting people’s potential.”

A necessary first step to increasing positive representation in advertising is raising awareness. The UNstereotype Alliance – a partnership convened by UN (United Nations) Women comprised of industry leaders, decision-makers, and creatives – acknowledges that advertisers have “the power to influence culture and society” and “must ensure the advertising or content we create shows people as progressive, authentic and multi-dimensional.” They write: “We must cooperate to intervene and dismantle harmful stereotypes in the pursuit of a truly equal world.”

The BBB National Programs' Children’s Advertising Review Unit recently spotlighted the need to broaden the definition of representation in children’s advertising. The World Federation of Advertisers – which includes the support of the world’s top marketers and industry leaders – has developed progressive best practices around responsibly depicting race and ethnicity, ability, sexuality, gender identity, and age in advertising. The WFA reminds us that diversity and inclusion aren’t “just about casting” but about asking yourself, at every stage of the creative process, “who is being depicted,” “whose lens are we seeing this character, and are your characters defined by one characteristic or something deeper? Can you imagine your character as a real person?”

A step beyond generating encouragement and awareness is accountability. Advertising self-regulation is well-suited for this role and many self-regulatory organizations (SROs) have already stepped up to the challenge. The International Chamber of Commerce Marketing Code, Article 4 states that “marketing communications should respect human dignity and should not incite or condone any form of discrimination… .”

Several SROs around the world have, years ago, incorporated this standard into their own advertising codes. SRO standards in the UK, New Zealand, Australia, Romania, the Netherlands, South Africa, Canada – to name a few – address multiple forms of discrimination in their codes such as prohibiting depictions in advertising that demean or disparage people based on their inclusion in an identifiable group. The UK, Australia, and New Zealand organizations have a robust body of case decisions directly confronting racist, misogynistic, anti-immigrant, and anti-religion advertising claims. 

While this may be of some surprise for us in the United States, most SROs have reported that “most complaints on discrimination in ads do not pose any particular difficulty and the body handling consumer complaints is often able to reach a unanimous decision.” Appropriate remedies could include recommending that the claim be discontinued and issuing press releases.

In 2019, Ad Standards Australia launched a public ‘Kinder Conditions” campaign to increase awareness of the wide range of social issues covered by various advertising and of the value of the advertising self-regulatory system which protects community standards. According to Ad Standards Australia, the campaign was designed to “challenge perceptions and remind the nation that discriminatory and offensive advertising is prohibited by the existing (advertising) standards.” and the public was encouraged to file complaints if advertising failed to reflect society’s values across wide-ranging social issues."

One element of the campaign used advertising with provocative headlines, such as “this ad is for white people only” or “if you’re a woman, don’t bother to read this ad,” to prompt viewers to nominate a “kinder ad” that celebrates diversity.        

In the United States, our advertising self-regulatory system at BBB National Programs historically has evaluated advertising primarily for truth and accuracy, usually through the National Advertising Division's review of comparative and monadic product performance claims. Opening the process (or designing a separate process) to create accountability for harmful stereotypes immediately raises the question, is this type of advertising self-regulation even feasible in the United States?

Other countries have had mechanisms in place for years, and the Children's Advertising Review Unit already has a non-stereotyping standard for children’s advertising. While government enforcement of such standards raises First Amendment concerns, our use of public decisions and press releases could initiate industry dialogue around issues of gender expression, race, religion, sexuality, and age. A small number of cases could have a very big impact on industry.

Developing a mechanism to address representation in advertisements would not be simple, but the time is now to start the conversation. Harmful stereotypes in advertising must not be a forever problem.

 

 

 

Decisions

Decision

National Advertising Review Board Recommends Mint Mobile Discontinue or Modify Certain Claims for its Wireless Service

New York, NY – February 8, 2024 – A panel of the National Advertising Review Board (NARB) recommended that Mint Mobile modify or discontinue cost-per-month pricing promos, discontinue the “cut out the cost of retail service and passed those sweet savings directly to you” claim, and discontinue disparaging social media...

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Decision

National Advertising Review Board Recommends Comcast Discontinue Use of “10G” When Referring to the Name of its Network

New York, NY – February 5, 2024 – A panel of the National Advertising Review Board (NARB) recommended that Comcast discontinue use of the term 10G in the product service name “Xfinity 10G Network” and when 10G is used descriptively to describe the Xfinity network.

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Decision

National Advertising Division Recommends The Princeton Review Discontinue Point Increase Claims for MCAT Test Preparation Services

New York, NY – April 18, 2024 – In a Fast-Track SWIFT challenge, the National Advertising Division recommended that The Princeton Review (TPR) discontinue claims that its students “Score a 515+ on the MCAT or add 15 points depending on your starting score. Guaranteed or your money back.”

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Decision

National Advertising Division Recommends Lily of the Desert Nutraceuticals Discontinue “100% Pure Avocado Oil” Claim for Tropical Plantation Avocado Oil

New York, NY – April 15, 2024 – The National Advertising Division recommended that Lily of the Desert Nutraceuticals discontinue the claim “100% Pure Avocado Oil” for its Tropical Plantation Avocado Oil and avoid conveying the unsupported message that the product is 100% pure avocado...

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BBB National Programs provides summaries of all case decisions in the Case Decision Summary library. For the full text of National Advertising Division, National Advertising Review Board, and Children’s Advertising Review Unit decisions, subscribe to the Online Archive. For members of the press, the full text of any BBB National Programs decision is available by emailing the request to press@bbbnp.org

 

 

 

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