The Advertising Association promotes the role and rights of responsible advertising and its value to people, society, businesses and the economy. We represent UK advertisers, agencies, media owners and tech companies on behalf of the entire industry, acting as the connection between industry professionals and the politicians and policy-makers.

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The Advertising Association focuses on major industry and policy areas that have huge ramifications on UK advertising. This section contains our work around public health, gambling advertising, data and e-privacy, trust, the digital economy and more.

Credos is the advertising industry’s independent think tank. It produces research, evidence and reports into the impact and effectiveness of and public and political response to advertising on behalf of UK advertisers in order to enable the industry to make informed decisions.

Front Foot is our industry’s member network of over 90 businesses across UK advertising. It aims to promote the role of responsible advertising and its value to people, society and the economy through a coalition of senior leaders from advertisers, agencies and media owners.

We run a number of events throughout the year, from our annual LEAD summit to the Media Business Course and regular breakfast briefings for our members. We are also the official UK representative for the world’s biggest festival of creativity – Cannes Lions.

Trust isn’t just about awareness — it’s about understanding

/ December 4th 2024 / James Best
Credos Thinks

Awareness may be a precondition of trustfulness, but it is far from a guarantee. I mean, we are all aware of Donald Trump

Among brands competing in a category, salience — itself a step up from passive awareness — is certainly of enormous value, prompting (and predicting) preference.

But we are all well aware of plenty of brands that we have no intention to buy; knowing about them does not mean they appeal.

Some things are more complicated than a shopping choice — one of which being advertising regulation.

Our industry values the public’s trust in the ads they come across; it underpins the effectiveness of their work. And trust in advertising correlates with a belief that it is well-regulated: of those who think the amount of advertising regulation is about right, 42% trust the industry; of those who think there is too little or no regulation, only 17% trust it, according to Credos research.

More than awareness

So advertisers, media owners and agencies alike invest considerable energy and money to sustain the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) as a first-class regulator. A chunk of that energy and money goes into the ASA’s own advertising campaign, now in the third year of its Advertising Association-led revival.

The results show that its success — more of which later — is about more than raising awareness.

Indeed, plain awareness of the ASA seems to bear no correlation with faith in its efficacy. Our quarterly public tracking surveys show that the over-55s (nearly 40% of the adult population) are far more likely to name the ASA spontaneously as an organisation dealing with complaints about ads than the under-34s (12% versus 2%) and almost twice as likely to recognise the name when prompted (81% versus 43%).

Yet, those same over-55s are twice as likely to believe that there is too little regulation of advertising than the younger cohort (37% versus 19%). Further, there is absolutely no difference between those aware of the ASA and those unaware when it comes to their trust in advertising overall.

This is not necessarily surprising. We know that older people are more disapproving of advertising than the young, who also trust it more. And it makes sense that older people will have had the time to become aware of the ASA.

But awareness alone is not enough to shake their negative opinion of advertising.

The ASA’s role

The change comes when people see and recall the ASA campaign.

Those claiming to have done so are more than twice as likely as those who did not (43% versus 21%) to say they tend to trust most ads, the ASA’s own awareness tracking survey found. They are even more prone (33% versus 14%) to say they trust the industry — a jump largely driven by the young, who are much more likely to recall seeing the ASA campaign.

The explanation? The ASA ads are not just about brand awareness but understanding.

Understanding, that is, of what the ASA does, that it does it across all media and that it does it well. And those who trust the ASA have a 50% higher level of trust in ads and the ad industry than those who don’t.

Obviously, there is a long way to go in building and maintaining this understanding of the ASA’s role, which is hardly universal or deeply held, but progress has been impressive. Trust in advertising has risen since 2021 from 30% to 38% — an unprecedented improvement.

Clearly, it’s not only about knowing something exists, but feeling confident in its competence and integrity that creates the trust that brands and even advertising regulators so treasure.