Additional Information
Content
Weetabix online game ruled to be exploitative of children
Weetabix has been rapped by the advertising watchdog after a Weetabix-branded children's online game was ruled to be exploitative.
Weetabix: ASA rules online Weetakid game is exploitative of children
The row centred on a Weetabix–branded app that could be accessed via the cereal brand's homepage.
The Weetabix app, which used QR technology and was created by Bartle Bogle Hegarty, included two games in which players could control a character, called the WeetaKid, to collect items to populate Weetakid's "world".
A character in the game issued messages to players such as " No Weetabix? Disaster! Don't make things harder for yourself!", and "You’re not eating your Weetabix? What about the extra energy? Oh good heavens!"
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) was hit by complaints, including representations from the Family and Parenting Institute, which questioned the morality of the advergame.
The complaints challenged Weetabix on five separate issues: whether it exploited the credulity, loyalty, vulnerability of children by making them feel inferior or unpopular for not buying a product; that it included a plea to children to buy an advertised product; that the games were identifiable as marketing communications, and that the games advertised as a product, Weetos Bars, which could be classified as a product as a high in fat, salt or sugar and thus encouraged poor nutritional habits.
In its defence, Weetabix said it had purposefully designed the app so that it could be played without purchasing the product. It also said the game was played in an "imaginary" and "fantastical" world, and so the impact of words and phrases used in the game should be viewed in that context.
The cereal brand acknowledged it was possible that messages and actions in the game might impact on children's food preferences, but said that that in itself did not constitute a breach of the CAP Code.
However, in its ruling, the ASA said it disagreed with Weetabix and that the game blurred the lines between the fantastical and real world. It also ruled that the language in the game could mean that children thought they were failing if they did not eat Weetabix.
The advertising watchdog said that although Weetabix had not broken any rules on three out of the four issues that had been complained about, it ruled that it exploited the credulity, loyalty of children by making them feel inferior or unpopular for not buying a product.
It banned the Weetabix ad, adding that, "We told Weetabix to ensure that their marketing communications that were directly targeted at children did not exploit their credulity or vulnerability, or make them feel inferior if they did not buy or ask their parents to buy, Weetabix's products."
This article was first published on marketingmagazine.co.uk
Additional Information
Latest jobs Jobs web feed
- senior planner > SPORTS BRANDS collectivo Up to £90,000 plus benefits, London
- Head of Media, Marketing & Communications PGA Competitive, Sutton Coldfield, West Midlands
- Account Director- Exciting Online Content Marketing Company- Up to £70,000 plus OTE Cedar Scott Up to £70,000 basic (up to £90,000 OTE) plus share options, Central London
- ACCOUNT DIRECTOR/SENIOR ACCOUNT DIRECTOR - BTL/SP/Brand Experience - London - £45 - £55k plus bonus Judi Patton £45K-55K plus bonus, London/Greater London
- Senior Planning Director, International Agency, London, to £120k Fill Recruitment Ltd to £120,000, Central London
- Head of Customer Analytics - Consultancy Harnham £90000 - £100000 per annum + benefits, London
Most read
Most commented

BR Insight
Digital Integration: Connecting the Dots (Webcast) External website
Integrated digital marketing offers huge opportunities to engage, servic...
Mobile 2013: Top 5 Need-to-Knows to Fully Cash In (Expert Reports) External website
Mobile marketing is coming of age, and the pace of change is now exponen...
Internet Shopping: 6 Quick Wins to Revive Your Online Sales (Expert Reports) External website
With UK consumers spending an average of £1,083 a year online, int...
Conversational Mobile Marketing: Engage Customers and Empower Advocates (Expert Reports) External website
The pressure is on for marketers and mobile operators to embrace a strat...
Tablets: Redefining Consumer Experiences (Webcast) External website
As a nation, the UK is media and technology obsessed with over half of t...
Harness the Power of Your Customer's Digital Voice (Webcast) External website
All customers have the potential to become your brand advocates, driving...









