Company Policies Hub | 8 minute read

Company Advertising Policy Template

Company Advertising Policy Template

Every piece of advertising your company produces represents a legal and reputational commitment. Without a company advertising policy, employees in marketing, sales, and communications make inconsistent decisions about what claims are permissible, what requires legal review, and what could expose the organization to FTC enforcement or competitor litigation. This template gives you a company advertising policy structured around FTC compliance requirements, approval governance, and the social media and influencer disclosure rules that most organizations are still not managing consistently.

What Is a Company Advertising Policy?

A company advertising policy defines the standards that govern how the organization presents its products, services, and brand in paid and earned media. It establishes who has authority to approve advertising content, what claims require substantiation before publication, what disclosures are legally required, and how violations are handled.

Without this policy, organizations routinely face preventable problems. One mid-size SaaS company ran a series of performance marketing ads claiming their product "reduces HR admin time by 80%." When the FTC requested substantiation for the claim, the company discovered the statistic came from an informal customer conversation, not a documented study. The company retracted the ads, issued corrections, and absorbed significant legal costs. None of that would have happened if an advertising policy with a substantiation requirement had been in place before launch.

What a Company Advertising Policy Should Include

An effective company advertising policy addresses both the substantive standards for advertising content and the procedural workflow for getting that content approved. The following elements are required for a policy that reduces real risk.

  • Scope and coverage: Defines which types of content the policy covers, including paid advertising, social media, press releases, email marketing, influencer content, and internal communications that describe product capabilities.
  • Truthfulness and substantiation requirements: Specifies that all advertising claims must be truthful, not misleading, and substantiated before use. Defines what constitutes acceptable substantiation (customer studies, independently verified data, qualifying statements).
  • Approval authority: Names the roles or teams responsible for approving advertising content before publication, including marketing leadership, legal counsel, and compliance where applicable.
  • Prohibited content: Defines specific content categories that are not permissible, including unsubstantiated superlatives, competitive disparagement, misleading pricing claims, and testimonials that misrepresent typical results.
  • Social media and employee posting standards: Addresses employee posts about the company, sponsored content disclosure obligations, and the specific FTC endorsement disclosure requirements.
  • Influencer and partnership disclosures: Covers paid influencer relationships, affiliate arrangements, and any relationship that constitutes a material connection under FTC guidelines.
  • Competitor references: Defines when and how competitors may be referenced in advertising, including requirements for accuracy and legal review.
  • Corrective action for non-compliant advertising: Describes the process for pulling, correcting, or qualifying content that does not meet policy standards.
  • Record-keeping requirements: Specifies that all advertising claims and supporting substantiation must be documented and retained for a defined period.
  • Training and awareness: Describes how and when employees responsible for advertising content will receive training on the policy requirements.

Company Advertising Policy Template

Company Advertising Policy

Effective Date: [DATE]

Approved by: [NAME / TITLE]

Policy Owner: [MARKETING / LEGAL / COMPLIANCE DEPARTMENT]

Review Date: [DATE]

Version: [1.0]

Policy Brief and Purpose

[COMPANY NAME] is committed to honest, accurate, and legally compliant advertising in all media. This policy establishes the standards that govern all advertising and marketing communications produced by or on behalf of [COMPANY NAME], including paid and organic content, social media, influencer partnerships, and employee-generated content referencing [COMPANY NAME]'s products or services. The purpose is to protect [COMPANY NAME]'s reputation, ensure compliance with applicable laws and regulations, and maintain the trust of customers, partners, and the public.

Scope

This policy applies to all employees, contractors, agencies, and representatives who create, approve, or publish advertising or marketing content on behalf of [COMPANY NAME]. It covers all formats and channels including digital advertising, social media, print, broadcast, email marketing, website content, press releases, sales materials, and trade show presentations. It also applies to external partners producing co-branded or sponsored content that references [COMPANY NAME].

Policy Elements

1. Truthfulness and Substantiation

All advertising claims must be truthful, accurate, and not misleading. This applies to explicit claims and to implied claims created by the combination of text, imagery, and context. Performance claims, statistics, and comparative claims must be substantiated before use. Acceptable substantiation includes:

  • Documented customer studies or surveys with clearly defined scope and methodology
  • Independently verified data from recognized research sources
  • Internal data supported by documented methodology that has been reviewed by [LEGAL / COMPLIANCE]

Qualifying statements must be included wherever a claim applies only to specific conditions, customer segments, or configurations. Qualifications must be clearly legible and proximate to the claim they modify.

2. Approval Workflow

The following approval steps are required before any advertising content is published:

  • Campaign-level approval: [MARKETING DIRECTOR / VP MARKETING] reviews and approves campaign strategy and messaging before creative development begins.
  • Content approval: All individual ad creatives, landing pages, email campaigns, and social posts making product claims require written approval from [LEGAL COUNSEL / COMPLIANCE OFFICER] before publication.
  • Performance claims and competitive claims: Any content including performance statistics, customer results, or explicit or implicit comparisons to competitors requires [LEGAL] review and documented substantiation on file before approval.
  • Influencer and partner content: All sponsored or co-branded content requires [MARKETING LEAD] review to verify FTC disclosure requirements are met before publication.

3. Prohibited Content

The following content is prohibited in all advertising regardless of channel:

  • Unsubstantiated performance claims (e.g., "the best," "the fastest," "unmatched," unless substantiated with documented evidence)
  • False or misleading comparative claims about competitors, including cherry-picked comparisons that misrepresent the competitive landscape
  • Testimonials or endorsements that misrepresent the typical customer result, without a clearly disclosed qualifying statement
  • Hidden or inadequately disclosed material connections in influencer or affiliate content
  • Misleading pricing claims, including prices that are only available under unexplained conditions
  • Health or safety claims that exceed substantiated evidence

4. Social Media and Employee Posting

Employees who post publicly about [COMPANY NAME]'s products, services, or business activities on personal or company social media accounts must:

  • Disclose their employment relationship with [COMPANY NAME] clearly when their post could be understood as endorsing or promoting [COMPANY NAME]'s products or services
  • Ensure all content they post about [COMPANY NAME] is accurate and consistent with approved messaging
  • Not make product claims that have not been approved through the standard advertising review process
  • Refer to [COMPANY NAME]'s Social Media Policy for additional requirements governing employee social media activity

5. Influencer and Affiliate Disclosure

All content produced by influencers, affiliates, or partners who receive compensation, free products, or any other material benefit from [COMPANY NAME] must include a clear and prominent disclosure of the material connection. Disclosures must meet FTC Endorsement Guide standards: they must be unambiguous, easily visible, and placed before or immediately adjacent to the relevant content. Disclosure language such as "#ad," "#sponsored," or "Paid partnership with [COMPANY NAME]" is required.

6. Competitor References

Advertising that names, depicts, or implicitly references a competitor requires [LEGAL] review and approval before publication. All comparative claims must be accurate, current, and supported by documented substantiation. Disparagement, false impressions, and comparisons that are technically accurate but contextually misleading are prohibited.

7. Corrective Action

When advertising content is found to be non-compliant after publication, [DESIGNATED ROLE] must be notified immediately. The content must be removed, corrected, or qualified within [TIMEFRAME] of the identification. If the non-compliant content may have already caused consumer harm or regulatory exposure, [LEGAL COUNSEL] must be notified within [TIMEFRAME] for assessment.

8. Record-Keeping

Documentation supporting all performance claims and testimonials used in advertising must be retained for a minimum of [PERIOD, e.g., 3 years] after the last date the content was used. Records must include the substantiation source, date, scope, and the name of the [LEGAL / COMPLIANCE] reviewer who approved the claim.

Employee Responsibilities

  • Read and acknowledge this policy at hire and upon material update.
  • Submit all advertising content for review through the defined approval workflow before publication.
  • Retain substantiation documentation for all claims before submitting for approval.
  • Report suspected non-compliant advertising to [DESIGNATED CONTACT] promptly.
  • Complete required advertising and FTC compliance training by stated deadlines.

Manager and HR Responsibilities

  • Ensure direct reports with advertising responsibilities complete required training and operate within the approval workflow.
  • Escalate potential policy violations or regulatory exposure to [LEGAL / COMPLIANCE] within [TIMEFRAME].
  • Document all approvals, corrections, and substantiation reviews in accordance with record-keeping requirements.

Disciplinary Action

Violations of this policy may result in disciplinary action up to and including termination of employment. Where violations expose [COMPANY NAME] to regulatory liability, legal costs, or reputational harm, [COMPANY NAME] reserves the right to seek recovery of damages and to refer the matter to appropriate authorities.

Disclaimer

This template is a starting point and does not constitute legal advice. Consult qualified legal counsel before finalizing this policy, particularly given FTC rule changes effective in recent years.

How to Customize This Advertising Policy Template for Your Company

Start with your specific industry. Regulated industries including financial services, healthcare, dietary supplements, and alcohol have advertising compliance requirements that go well beyond FTC general guidance. These sector-specific rules should be layered on top of this policy's baseline, not substituted for it.

Next, define your approval workflow specifically. A policy that says "legal review is required" without naming a specific person, a specific submission process, and a defined turnaround time creates bottlenecks that cause teams to route around the process. Be prescriptive.

Address social media explicitly for your employee base. If your organization has a significant marketing or sales team that posts publicly, the social disclosure requirements deserve their own training module. The FTC has significantly increased enforcement around employee and influencer disclosure requirements since 2023.

Finally, build the record-keeping requirement into your workflow system rather than relying on individual tracking. Claims substantiation documented in shared folders that no one monitors is not substantiation for regulatory purposes.

Company Advertising Policy Best Practices

  • Substantiate before you publish, not after. The FTC's standard is that claims must be supported at the time of publication, not retroactively. Build the substantiation step into your creative review workflow so it cannot be skipped.
  • Train marketing and sales teams separately. Sales materials, case studies, and verbal representations made during demos are advertising in the FTC's view. Sales teams frequently make performance claims that would not pass a legal review if they were written down. Train them accordingly.
  • Review the policy whenever product capabilities change. A claim that was accurate for version 2.0 of your product may not accurately represent version 3.0. Version updates should trigger a review of active advertising claims.
  • Establish a clear process for competitor mentions. Many marketing teams add competitor comparisons late in the production cycle under time pressure. A pre-defined review pathway for competitive content reduces the risk of publishing comparisons that are technically accurate but contextually misleading.
  • Include agency and vendor contracts that reference the policy. External creative agencies and media buying partners need to operate under the same standards. Reference this policy in agency contracts and conduct periodic compliance reviews.

Common Mistakes in Company Advertising Policies

  • Scope is too narrow. Policies that cover paid advertising but not email, sales materials, or employee social posting leave the highest-risk content channels ungoverned.
  • No defined substantiation standard. "Claims must be accurate" is not a standard. "Claims must be supported by documented evidence reviewed by legal before publication" is a standard.
  • Approvals happen in email chains that aren't retained. A policy that requires legal review but stores the approval in someone's inbox creates an audit gap. Approvals should be stored in a documented, accessible system.
  • Influencer and affiliate disclosure is treated as optional. FTC enforcement actions for inadequate disclosure have increased materially since 2022. This is not a grey area — it is a defined legal requirement with financial penalties.
  • Policy is written once and never revisited. The advertising regulatory environment changes. A company advertising policy written before the FTC's 2023 updates to its endorsement guidelines may not meet current requirements.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What should a company advertising policy include?

A: A complete advertising policy covers truthfulness and substantiation standards, approval workflows, prohibited content categories, social media and employee posting requirements, influencer and affiliate disclosure obligations, competitor reference rules, corrective action processes, and record-keeping requirements.

Q: Is a company advertising policy legally required?

A: No law requires a formal advertising policy, but advertising content is governed by FTC regulations, Lanham Act standards, and industry-specific rules. Organizations without documented policies and approval workflows are more likely to publish non-compliant content and less able to defend their process when violations occur.

Q: How often should a company advertising policy be updated?

A: At minimum annually, and whenever there is a significant change in FTC guidance, a product launch that introduces new performance claims, or an advertising incident that revealed a gap. The FTC updated its Endorsement Guides in 2023, and many existing policies predate those changes.

Q: What happens if an employee violates the company advertising policy?

A: Consequences depend on the severity and intent of the violation. Publishing unapproved content may result in a formal warning. Making materially false claims, circumventing the approval process intentionally, or creating regulatory exposure for the organization may result in termination. Where violations create liability, the organization may also pursue cost recovery.

Q: How do you communicate a new advertising policy to employees?

A: Distribute the policy through a dedicated briefing for marketing, sales, and communications teams rather than a general email. Include scenario-based examples of what the policy permits and prohibits. Make clear what the approval workflow looks like step by step. Follow up with a brief training module and documented acknowledgment.

Q: Can a company advertising policy be customized per department?

A: The core standards should apply uniformly. However, department-specific procedures are appropriate. Marketing may have a full creative review workflow. Sales may have a shorter process for approving materials made in the field. Document both and ensure they meet the same substantiation and accuracy standards.

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