Responsible Marketing in 2025: What It Costs to Get It Wrong
Responsible marketing in 2025 means building commercial strategies that are honest, transparent, and genuinely aligned with customer interests, not just compliant with the minimum legal standard. The brands that are getting this right are not doing it out of altruism. They are doing it because the commercial case is now undeniable: customers have more information, more choice, and less patience for brands that treat them as a means to an end.
This is not a values conversation. It is a strategy conversation. And the two are no longer as separate as many marketing leaders would like to believe.
Key Takeaways
- Responsible marketing is a commercial discipline, not a compliance checkbox. Brands that conflate the two are leaving both money and trust on the table.
- Most marketing problems that get labelled as ethical failures are actually strategic failures: brands overpromising because the product cannot do the heavy lifting.
- Transparency in targeting, data use, and claims is increasingly a competitive differentiator, not just a regulatory requirement.
- The performance marketing obsession with lower-funnel capture has left many brands structurally dependent on demand they did not create, making them vulnerable when that demand shifts.
- Genuine customer delight is the most underused growth lever in marketing. Brands that build it in rarely need to compensate with aggressive or misleading tactics.
In This Article
- Why Responsible Marketing Has Become a Strategic Priority
- The Uncomfortable Link Between Marketing Ethics and Product Quality
- What Responsible Targeting Actually Looks Like in Practice
- Claims, Proof, and the Slow Erosion of Advertising Trust
- The Performance Marketing Problem No One Wants to Talk About
- Sustainability Claims: Where the Industry Is Still Getting It Wrong
- Inclusive Marketing: Beyond Representation as a Tactic
- Building a Responsible Marketing Framework That Holds Under Pressure
- What Responsible Marketing Is Not
Why Responsible Marketing Has Become a Strategic Priority
I have run agencies. I have sat in board rooms with clients who wanted results yesterday and did not particularly want to discuss how we got them. I understand the commercial pressure that leads marketing teams to cut corners, exaggerate claims, and build strategies around what sounds good rather than what is true. I have been in those conversations. I have also seen what happens when those shortcuts catch up with a brand.
The shift in 2025 is not that consumers have suddenly become more ethical. It is that they have become more informed and more connected. A misleading claim that would have gone unnoticed in 2010 now lives on Reddit, in a TikTok comment thread, and in a Which? investigation simultaneously. The cost of getting it wrong has compounded. The cost of getting it right has not changed much at all.
If you are thinking about responsible marketing only through the lens of regulatory compliance, you are already behind. The Advertising Standards Authority, the ICO, and the FCA are setting floors, not ceilings. The brands that are building durable commercial positions are treating responsible practice as a strategic input, not a legal constraint.
If you want to think about this in the context of broader commercial growth planning, the Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy hub covers the structural decisions that sit beneath most of these questions.
The Uncomfortable Link Between Marketing Ethics and Product Quality
Here is something I have believed for a long time but rarely hear said directly: most irresponsible marketing is a symptom of a product problem, not a marketing problem.
When a brand makes exaggerated claims, uses dark patterns to trap customers in subscriptions, or targets vulnerable audiences with products that do not serve them well, it is almost always because the product cannot stand on its own merits. Marketing becomes a blunt instrument to compensate for what the business cannot deliver organically.
I spent years working with clients across more than 30 industries. The ones with the healthiest marketing ecosystems were almost always the ones with genuinely good products and strong customer retention. They did not need to shout. They did not need to manipulate. They did not need to bury cancellation flows five clicks deep. Their marketing was cleaner because their business model was cleaner.
The ones who pushed hardest on aggressive tactics were often the ones with churn problems, margin problems, or product-market fit problems they had not resolved. Marketing was being asked to fill a hole that marketing cannot fill.
If a company genuinely delighted customers at every touchpoint, the commercial case for responsible marketing would be self-evident. The problem is that most companies have not built that foundation. So marketing ends up doing the compensating, and responsible practice becomes the first thing that gets traded away under pressure.
What Responsible Targeting Actually Looks Like in Practice
Targeting is where the gap between stated values and actual practice tends to be widest. Most brands will say they do not target vulnerable audiences. Far fewer have a clear internal definition of what that means, a documented policy, or any mechanism for enforcing it.
In 2025, responsible targeting means several things in practice. It means having a clear audience inclusion and exclusion framework that goes beyond platform defaults. It means understanding who is actually seeing your ads, not just who you intended to reach. It means making deliberate decisions about which signals you use for personalisation and which you choose not to use even when the platform makes them available.
The data piece is significant. The deprecation of third-party cookies has forced many brands to think more carefully about first-party data strategies, and that pressure has, in some cases, pushed them toward more transparent data relationships with customers. That is a genuine improvement. But it has also pushed some brands toward more aggressive first-party data collection, using consent mechanisms that are technically compliant but practically deceptive.
I reviewed a client’s consent flow once that had eleven separate toggles, all pre-selected to opt in, buried in a modal that appeared three seconds after page load. It was ICO-compliant on paper. It was not honest by any reasonable definition. The fact that it was legal did not make it responsible, and it did not make it smart. Customers who feel manipulated into sharing data are not customers who trust you with their money.
Forrester’s research on organisational agility and scaling touches on something relevant here: the brands that scale well are the ones that build internal accountability structures that outlast individual decisions. Responsible targeting is the same. It needs to be a policy, not a case-by-case judgment call made under deadline pressure.
Claims, Proof, and the Slow Erosion of Advertising Trust
Advertising trust is not in crisis because of a few bad actors. It is in a slow structural decline because the industry has spent decades making claims it cannot fully substantiate and hoping customers would not look too closely. They are looking more closely now.
The ASA upheld more complaints in the sustainability and greenwashing category in 2023 and 2024 than in any previous period. That is partly because regulators have sharpened their focus. It is also because the bar for what counts as a substantiated claim has risen, and many brands have not adjusted their creative and copy processes to match.
Responsible claims management in 2025 means building substantiation into the creative process, not bolting it on as a legal review at the end. It means being specific rather than vague. “Reduces energy consumption by 18% compared to our 2019 model” is a responsible claim if you can prove it. “More sustainable” is not a claim. It is a feeling dressed up as a fact.
I judged the Effie Awards for several years. The work that consistently won on effectiveness was almost never the work that made the biggest promises. It was the work that made a specific, credible promise and delivered on it. The correlation between responsible claims and effective advertising is not coincidental. Both require the same discipline: knowing what your product actually does and being honest about it.
The Performance Marketing Problem No One Wants to Talk About
I spent a significant part of my career in performance marketing. I ran teams managing hundreds of millions in paid media spend. I believed, for longer than I should have, that lower-funnel performance activity was the engine of growth. I now think a meaningful proportion of what performance marketing claims credit for was going to happen anyway.
That is not a reason to stop doing performance marketing. It is a reason to be honest about what it is actually doing. Performance channels are extraordinarily good at capturing existing demand. They are much less effective at creating new demand. When a brand relies entirely on lower-funnel capture, it is not building a market. It is harvesting one that someone else, or some earlier brand-building activity, created.
The responsible marketing dimension here is attribution. Many performance marketing reports are, in a technical sense, accurate. They report what the data shows. But the data does not show what would have happened without the ad. It does not separate the customer who was going to buy regardless from the customer who was genuinely influenced. Presenting those numbers as proof of causation rather than correlation is, at best, intellectually dishonest. At worst, it is how marketing budgets get misallocated for years.
Platforms like Hotjar have done useful work on growth loops and understanding actual user behaviour, which is a more honest starting point for attribution conversations than last-click models. The question is whether marketing teams are willing to have those conversations when the numbers are less flattering.
Responsible marketing includes responsible measurement. That means being willing to tell a client or a board that your numbers are an approximation, not a proof. It means building measurement frameworks that acknowledge uncertainty rather than hiding it behind confident-looking dashboards.
Sustainability Claims: Where the Industry Is Still Getting It Wrong
Greenwashing is the most visible and most prosecuted form of irresponsible marketing right now, and the industry is still not handling it well. The problem is not that brands are deliberately lying about their environmental credentials in most cases. The problem is that marketing teams are making claims that the business cannot substantiate, because the pressure to appear sustainable has outrun the actual work of becoming sustainable.
The EU’s Green Claims Directive, which is moving through implementation, will require specific, verifiable evidence for any environmental claim made in advertising. The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority has already taken action against several brands under existing consumer protection law. This is not a future risk. It is a present one.
The practical implication for marketing teams is straightforward, if uncomfortable. Any sustainability claim in your copy needs a documented evidence base. “Carbon neutral” requires a verified offset methodology and a clear scope definition. “Eco-friendly packaging” requires a comparison point and a measurement standard. “We’re committed to net zero” is not a claim. It is an aspiration, and regulators are increasingly treating the two as distinct.
BCG’s work on go-to-market strategy and pricing makes a point that applies here: brands that build credibility through specificity outperform those that compete on vague positioning. That holds for sustainability as much as it holds for price or quality. Vague green claims are not just legally risky. They are commercially weak.
Inclusive Marketing: Beyond Representation as a Tactic
Inclusive marketing has been on the agenda for several years. The execution, in many cases, has been poor. Not because brands do not care about inclusion, but because they have approached it as a creative brief rather than a strategic commitment.
Casting a diverse range of people in your advertising while your product is inaccessible, unaffordable, or irrelevant to those communities is not inclusive marketing. It is representation as decoration. Customers, particularly younger ones, are increasingly able to tell the difference.
Responsible inclusive marketing starts with the product and the commercial model, not the creative. It asks whether the product genuinely serves the communities it is depicting. It asks whether the pricing, the distribution, the customer service, and the user experience are genuinely accessible. If the answer is no, then changing the casting brief is not going to solve the problem. It is going to create a credibility gap.
I have worked with brands that spent significant budget on inclusive creative while simultaneously running customer service operations that were, in practice, inaccessible to non-English speakers. The advertising said one thing. The experience said another. The gap between those two things is where trust erodes.
Building a Responsible Marketing Framework That Holds Under Pressure
Most responsible marketing frameworks fail not because they are badly designed but because they are not stress-tested against commercial pressure. A policy that holds when there is no pressure is not a policy. It is a statement of intent.
When I was growing an agency from around 20 people to over 100, one of the hardest things to maintain was consistent standards as the business scaled and as client pressure increased. The clients who pushed hardest on turnaround times, on claim approval, on targeting parameters, were often the ones in the most commercially precarious positions. They needed results fast and were less interested in the how. The agency’s job was to hold the line without losing the relationship. That is genuinely difficult, and pretending otherwise does not help anyone.
A responsible marketing framework needs to include several components that are often missing. It needs a clear internal escalation path for when a client or a brief pushes against your standards. It needs documented sign-off processes for claims, targeting parameters, and consent mechanisms. It needs a named owner, not a committee, because committees diffuse accountability. And it needs to be reviewed against actual work in market, not just against the brief that was approved.
The Forrester perspective on go-to-market challenges in regulated industries is instructive here. In sectors where the cost of a compliance failure is existential, brands build rigour into process by necessity. The lesson for all marketers is that responsible practice should not wait for a regulatory shock to become systematic.
Vidyard’s research on go-to-market team performance highlights how much pipeline potential is left unrealised when teams are misaligned on fundamentals. The same logic applies to responsible marketing: the cost of misalignment between what you say and what you do is not just reputational. It is commercial.
The broader context for these decisions sits within your go-to-market strategy. How you position, who you target, what you promise, and how you measure it are all interconnected. The Growth Strategy hub at The Marketing Juice covers the strategic layer that responsible marketing sits within, if you want to think about these questions in a wider commercial frame.
What Responsible Marketing Is Not
It is worth being clear about what this is not, because the term gets stretched in ways that are not always useful.
Responsible marketing is not the same as purpose-driven marketing. A brand can have a strong social purpose and still run misleading campaigns. A brand can have no stated purpose beyond making money and still market honestly and transparently. Purpose and responsibility are related but not identical.
Responsible marketing is not the same as safe marketing. Some of the most responsible marketing work I have seen has been provocative, challenging, and commercially aggressive. Being responsible about your claims and your targeting does not mean being bland. It means being honest.
And responsible marketing is not a cost centre. The brands that have built the most durable commercial positions over the last decade are, with very few exceptions, the ones that have built genuine trust with their customers. That trust is a commercial asset. It reduces churn. It improves conversion. It lowers the cost of acquisition over time. The growth strategies that compound are almost always the ones built on genuine customer value, not on clever tactics that erode it.
About the Author
Keith Lacy is a marketing strategist and former agency CEO with 20+ years of experience across agency leadership, performance marketing, and commercial strategy. He writes The Marketing Juice to cut through the noise and share what works.
