How to Avoid Unfair Trade Practices in Your Business

By James Woods
Managing Partner

Unfair trade practices come with a high price. Consequences can involve legal proceedings, fines and damages, and a damaged business reputation. Oftentimes, unfair trade practices are enacted intentionally. However, it’s also possible to find yourself in hot water over an unfair trade practice you didn’t intend to commit.

It’s best to become informed about the common unfair trade practices businesses accidentally commit. That way, you can learn from the mistakes of others and avoid making these expensive errors in your business. 

Keep Product Presentations Clear

Businesses frequently find themselves in trouble over unfair trade practices in the area of product misrepresentation. Misrepresenting a product can happen in many ways. Some common ones include: 

  • Exaggeration of a product’s ability, safety, or function 
  • Failure to adequately warn of risks
  • Failure to list all ingredients
  • Untrue claims of product origin, materials, or quality 

When you make these types of mistakes, you put your business at risk of product liability claims. If you’ve done this accidentally, you can still be held responsible for innocent misrepresentation. When you do it knowingly, you can be found guilty of fraudulent or negligent misrepresentation. 

Don’t Make Promises You Can’t Keep

Another common business practice that is considered an unfair trade practice involves the words you use to convince your customers about a product’s quality. It’s normal to try to sell a product by convincing customers of how great it is. 

However, be careful not to exaggerate a product’s protections or impact. Areas that can get a business in trouble include: 

  • Guarantees
  • Promises
  • Warranties
  • Endorsements
  • Testimonials

When your business makes a claim, it needs to be truthful and your company needs to stand behind it. Making promises that you can’t back is considered false advertising, and it’s an unfair trade practice that can leave you with legal trouble and fines. Review your wording carefully. 

Don’t Confuse Your Customers

Another mistake to watch out for is engaging with your customers in a way that leaves them confused. Seek to have a policy of clear communication. Make sure customers understand things like the following: 

  • Terms, limitations, and conditions
  • Pricing
  • Business contact information
  • The process for submitting complaints
  • Fines, fees, and additional costs

Use clear wording and make sure customers are well-informed. Businesses often get into trouble for taking advantage of demographics more susceptible to confusion, like the elderly or those who don’t speak English fluently. Accusations of deceptive pricing and breach of warranty can result from unclear communication with customers.

Know Your Contract Terms Well

You probably don’t conduct business in a vacuum. Most businesses have contracts in place with other parties, whether they’re customers, clients, manufacturers, or distributors. 

Failure to know and honor your contract terms can land you in a lot of trouble. Sometimes contracts are broken on purpose. Other times, this happens accidentally. Whatever the reason, a breached contract can lead to all sorts of consequences, including lawsuits, fines, and hefty payments for damages. 

Contract issues related to unfair trade practices can also come out of having unclear, confusing, or deceptive wording written into a contract. Make sure that all contracts are phrased clearly so that all parties involved understand the contract terms. 

Intentionally making contract terms vague or misleading can leave you facing a fraud accusation over misrepresentation. You should review the terms of all of your contracts and make sure business is conducted in a way that honors contractual agreements.  

Watch Your Wording

These common unfair trade practices all have something in common: deceptive wording. When you own a business, much of your communication with customers is through the written word. This communication includes signs, emails, promotions, flyers, signage, and paperwork. 

Monitoring your marketing department and running materials past your lawyer are two ways to keep your business clear of legal trouble over unfair trade practices. 

The legal team at Woods Lonergan can help you identify potential issues in your organization, including unfair trade practices. To learn more about how a business attorney can help you keep your company in compliance, reach out today.

About the Author

James Woods, Managing Partner of Woods Lonergan, holds more than 25 years of experience in corporate, real estate, and business legal matters. His expertise in handling negotiations, litigation, jury trials, and all forms of alternative dispute resolution spans multiple areas, including corporate, real estate, and commercial litigation. James actively represents dozens of Cooperative and Condominium Boards and serves as counsel to many Corporate Boards. Prior to founding the firm, James proudly served as an Assistant District Attorney for Nassau County and handled both jury and bench trials. With experience that also covers sophisticated transactions and complex acquisitions, James also serves as counsel to several domestic companies in a range of industries and commercial arenas, including real estate, insurance, banking, transportation, and construction. If you have any questions about this article you can contact attorney James Woods through his biography page.

Disclaimer: The information in this article and blog post (“post”) is provided for informational purposes only, and may not reflect the current law(s) in every jurisdiction. No information contained in this post should be construed as legal advice from Woods Lonergan PLLC or the individual author(s), nor is it intended to be a substitute for legal counsel on any subject matter. Nothing herein shall be construed to create an attorney-client relationship with Woods Lonergan PLLC. No reader of this post should act or refrain from acting on the basis of any information included in, or accessible through, this Post without seeking the appropriate legal or other professional advice on the particular facts and circumstances at issue from an attorney licensed in the recipient’s jurisdiction. This post is attorney advertising.
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