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The EU sets a game changer in place for thousands of companies!

 
   After getting home from a hard day of work the last thing you want to hear is the home phone ringing on the other side of the room. You get off of your comfortable sofa and pick up the phone – to be asked to informed of a ‘2 for 1’ offer on the purchase of a pair of glasses from an opticians that you visited over 10 years ago. Well these calls could soon be non-existent, unless you GIVE permission to these companies. The same rules would apply to marketing e-mails and post that we receive. The EU is on the verge of passing a law (named the EU Data Protection Regulation) that will result in companies and businesses having to ask you, as a customer, to give permission to use/store your details for marketing purposes upon receiving them. As the rules currently stand businesses are able to use your details for their own marketing purposes if you have given them the details and you can lawfully opt-out of receiving these calls, emails or post at any point. So in layman terms it would turn from an OPT-OUT process to an OPT-IN process.
   Adding to this the IP address will be considered ‘personal data’ leading to a lot of inaccuracies on how many people have actually visited a business’s website.
 
The flow and profiling of data will be restricted, which will impact the effectiveness of your direct marketing. IP addresses will be listed as personal data. So you will need consent from visitors to record and store their activity on your website. This will affect web analytics and online marketing
 
   As a person who has worked in retail in previous positions, I have witnessed first-hand how reliant companies are on their marketing to entice customers away from competitor businesses. The optical company that I worked for would send out thousands of letters to patients on their system. These letters would include vouchers for special offers, and an upsurge in the booking of sight tests and conversion to purchases thereafter would be very noticeable. Patients/Customers would like to have that physical copy of a voucher that they received in the post – the same applies to an e-mail in which a voucher is attached that they have the option to print out. The same trend of how affective marketing is applies not only to retail but also to insurance companies, travel agents and the like.
                                            
 
   In my opinion, if I was being asked to opt-in for e-mails, phone calls or post from companies I would instinctively reject the offer. Upon further thinking, I would aim to accept the offer of receiving marketing updates. It is important that we support companies in what they aim to do, and with thousands of companies going out of business we need to keep them growing strong, before it leads to the loss of income for companies which would in turn lead to loss of job roles. The loss of job roles would not only apply to sales representatives or telesales personnel but also for employees in the Marketing sector. With the loss of IP and e-mail addresses, and other similar types of personal data, they would have no data to record and no way to send out advertisement to potential buyers or customers.
   The law is due to be passed by the EU by December 2014 and brought into action by 2016. Many are challenging the new regulations with Kohnstamm, a former chairman of the working Party Committee, believing the reforms will be severely delayed:
 
The European Commission officially proposed data protection reforms in January 2012 but there are question marks over whether the wording of a final package will be agreed upon by EU law makers before the end of the year. Once finalised at EU level, the reforms would not kick in for a further two years, meaning it may not be until 2017 until businesses have to comply with the new rules
 
 Upon the law being passed, any company with over 250 staff members will need to fill the role of a Data Protection Officer. A ‘National Supervisory Authority’ will be put into place by each country who will investigate breaches of the regulations. Any breach could result in fines of up to £500,000 or 2% of their global turnover.
 
   Overall, I feel that YES it is an inconvenience to receive these calls, emails and letters in the post, but these types of marketing schemes are what keeps our businesses active and growing. I’d be interested to hear what people have to say on the matter in the comment section below.
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