The JDP received a complaint about a LinkedIn ad for Skoda’s electrical SUV-type vehicle: Enyaq iV. The ad showed the vehicle traveling on a road by some woods, with the caption “The king of the forest. Don’t look, there is no deer in the photo, we are indeed talking about the Enyaq iV”.
The complainant:
Skoda argued that the post was taken down after it had become aware of the complaint and that only one complaint was received. It also pointed out that the intention was never to pass off the deer as being able to be “replaced” by a vehicle, albeit an electrical one. Instead, the aim was to showcase this new type of vehicle, which formed part of its roadmap towards increasing the production of 100% electric vehicles.
According to Skoda, the post was written in a deliberately offbeat tone and was based on what a collective understanding would make of it.
The JDP considered that the term “king of the forest” applied to the vehicle. If the promotion of an electric vehicle referred to the sustainable advantages of the product, this needed to be on the basis of objective, reliable, truthful and verifiable elements at the time of advertisement.
However, this was not the case for a comparison between a vehicle and a deer, as it unjustifiably equates an animal and a product causing environmental harm. The JDP therefore considered that the ad was likely to mislead the public about the environmental advantages of the vehicle.
The JDP also noted that the addition of a green heart emoticon reinforced the ecological argument accompanying the promotion of the vehicle, a point which the advertiser had accepted when it had mentioned that its “roadmap is leaning towards increasing production of 100% electric vehicles”.
The JDP ruled that the ad did not abide by the Sustainable Development Recommendation.
JDP ruling