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Telephone marketing

Contents

In brief…

In general, you must not make marketing calls to any number listed on the Telephone Preference Service (TPS) or Corporate TPS (CTPS), unless that person has specifically consented to your calls. You can call a number if it is not listed on the TPS or CTPS and you are not marketing claims management services. So you need to screen call lists against the TPS and CTPS. You can only make marketing calls in relation to pension schemes if you meet a strict criteria. You must allow your number to be displayed.

In more detail…

What are the rules on making live calls?

The rules on live marketing calls are in regulation 21, 21A and 21B. In short, you must not make unsolicited live calls:

  • to anyone who has told you they don’t want your calls;
  • to any number registered with the TPS or CTPS, unless the person has specifically consented to your calls – even if they are an existing customer (unless the call is in relation to pension schemes and you meet a strict criteria, see below);
  • for the purpose of claims management services, unless the person has specifically consented to your calls; or
  • in relation to pension schemes unless you are a trustee or manager of a pension scheme or a firm authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority, and the person you are calling has specifically consented to your calls or your relationship with the individual meets a strict criteria.

You must always say who is calling, allow your number (or an alternative contact number) to be displayed to the person receiving the call, and provide a contact address or freephone number if asked.

What are the rules on automated calls?

The rules on automated calls are in regulation 19, and are stricter. You must not make an automated marketing call – that is, a call made by an automated dialling system that plays a recorded message – unless the person has specifically consented to receive this type of call from you. General consent for marketing, or even consent for live calls, is not enough – it must specifically cover automated calls. See What counts as consent?

All automated calls must include your name and a contact address or freephone number. You must also allow your number (or an alternative contact number) to be displayed to the person receiving the call.

What are the TPS and the CTPS?

The TPS is the Telephone Preference Service. It is a central register of individuals who have opted out of receiving live marketing calls.

The CTPS is the Corporate TPS. It works in the same way as the TPS, but for companies and other corporate bodies (limited liability partnerships, Scottish partnerships and government bodies).

For more information and details of how to subscribe to the TPS/CTPS, see www.tpsonline.org.uk.

When can we make marketing calls to individuals?

You can call any individual who has specifically consented to receive marketing calls from you – for example, by ticking an opt-in box. See What counts as consent?

You can also make live calls without consent to a number if it is not listed on the TPS – but only if that person hasn’t objected to your calls in the past and you are not marketing claims management services.

In practice, this means you will need to screen most call lists against the TPS register. You will also need to keep your own ‘do not call’ list of people who object or opt out, and screen against that as well.

In general you cannot make live marketing calls in relation to pension schemes. However there is an exception to this but you must be a trustee or manager of the scheme, or authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority. You must also have either the individual’s consent for the calls or your relationship with the individual must meet a strict criteria. The criteria that you must meet if you want to make such a call without consent is as follows:

  • you have an existing customer relationship with the person you are calling;
  • they might reasonably expect such a call from you; and
  • you gave them a chance to opt-out of such calls when you collected their details and in every message you send them.

When can we make marketing calls to businesses?

The rules are the same as for calls to individuals. So, you can call any business that has specifically consented to your calls – for example, by ticking an opt-in box.

You can also make live calls to any business number that is not registered on the TPS or the CTPS, but only if they haven’t objected to your calls in the past and you are not marketing claims management services.

You should remember that some businesses (sole traders and some partnerships) register with the TPS, and others (companies, some partnerships and government bodies) register with the CTPS. For business-to-business (B2B) calls, you will therefore need to screen against both the TPS and the CTPS registers, as well as your own ‘do not call’ list.

For more information, see our separate guidance on business-to-business marketing.

Where can we get more information?

For more detailed information and practical advice on making live direct marketing calls, see our direct marketing using live calls guidance.

Checklists

Live marketing calls

We screen numbers against the Telephone Preference Service (TPS) or for corporate subscribers the Corporate Telephone Preference Service (CTPS).

We keep our own ‘do not call’ list of anyone who says they don’t want our marketing calls.

We screen numbers against our ‘do-not-call’ lists and we don’t call anyone that asks us not to.

We have consent if we make marketing calls about claims management services.

We ensure that we are authorised if we make marketing calls about pension schemes and that we have the person’s consent to call them (unless contacting our existing customers if they would expect the calls, and we offered them an opt-out when they gave their details and each time we contact them).

We display our number to the person we’re calling.

We say who we are and if asked we give an address or Freephone number that people can contact us on.

Automated marketing calls

We only make automated marketing calls if we have consent.

We display our number to the person we’re calling.

We say who we are in the message and give an address or Freephone number that people can contact us on.

We stop making automated marketing calls if consent is withdrawn.