Cigarette firms "urging shops to promote products following display ban"

A University of Stirling study found retailers are being offered cash and gifts in exchange for promotion

Published 1st Aug 2017

Tobaccos manufacturers are offering shopkeepers in Scotland incentives to promote their products in a bid to make sure their business doesn’t disappear in a puff of smoke following the advertising ban.

A University of Stirling study discovered tobacco companies are offering rewards – such as cash bonuses, gadgets and days - to small businesses that attempt to boost sales of their brands.

Twenty-four small independent tobacco retailers – including convenience stores, newsagents and petrol stations – were interviewed for the study, which followed the country’s ban on the open display of tobacco in April 2015.

Retailers reported being offered, and accepting, a range of incentives in return for preferential practices. These included retaining a tobacco unit, keeping up stock levels, putting the brans products in prominent places, pushing sales, trialling new stock and offering brand promotions.

Lead author Martine Stead, Deputy Director of the Institute of Social Marketing, said: "The tobacco industry has, for many years, incentivised retailers to stock and sell tobacco, and to display particular brands prominently on their shelves.

“We might have expected that these practices would decline following the ban on open displays because customers can no longer see the products. However, our study suggests that is not the case.

“The tobacco companies rely on retailers even more to promote tobacco, now that displays are covered up. They are still offering them payments and rewards, including substantial lump sums to make verbal recommendations to customers to try a particular brand.”

The study, conducted by the DISPLAY team, a collaboration between the Universities of Stirling, St Andrews and Edinburgh, and ScotCen, follows reports of similar incentive-driven schemes in Australia and Canada, where point-of-sale bans are also in place.

The Scottish team found retailers are saving up loyalty points built up with certain manufacturers, redeeming them at a later date for cash, gadgets, hospitality packages and business equipment. Some of the retailers also received a cash bonus for keeping tobacco on sale in their stores.

As part of one promotion, retailers were told they would be visited by a mystery shopper who would ask for a rival brand. Retailers who instead recommended another product that the company wished to promote would receive a lump sum as a reward.

Most of the retailers – 17 out of the 24 - were given assistance by tobacco companies before the ban took effect to adapt their gantries to comply with the legislation, which requires tobacco products to be kept out of plain sight in units behind doors or roll down covers.

The team acknowledged that using incentives to drive sales within the tobacco industry is not a new phenomenon. However, they found companies are now adapting these practices “to work within the context of the display ban”.

The team said this influence might be even more critical in the era of plain packaging, introduced in Scotland earlier this year.

Anti-smoking campaigners believe shopkeepers need to take some responsibility for the harm smoking causes. Sheila Duffy from ASH Scotland said:

“Tobacco manufacturers are trying to incentivise retailers to push their brands, their products. That’s really finding ways of undermining the restrictions that have been put in place for health resons.”

The study suggests the practice could be ended by introducing a complete ban on company payments to retailers, reducing the number of shops selling tobacco in any given area, banning sales near schools and offering retailers incentives to stop selling tobacco.

The interviews took place in four Scottish communities in June and July 2015 and over the same period in 2016.