AT&T tried to slam T-Mobile in ads by using an advertising watchdog's rulings against them. Now, that same watchdog, the NAD, has publicly ordered AT&T to stop, saying their ads violate the rules.
Well, this is awkward for AT&T
The carrier wars just hit a new level of messy. The BBB National Programs’ National Advertising Division (NAD) has officially told AT&T to stop its recent ad campaign against T-Mobile. This whole thing started when AT&T launched ads calling out T-Mobile because the NAD had asked T-Mobile to fix its marketing claims 16 times in four years. It was a very public "gotcha" moment.
Well, the NAD didn't appreciate being used as a marketing tool. In a press release from October 24th, the watchdog group pointed out that participants in its program explicitly agree not to use its findings for promotional purposes.
According to the NAD, AT&T's actions were a "direct violation" of this agreement. The procedures state parties agree "not to mischaracterize any decision... or use and/or disseminate such decision... for advertising and/or promotional purposes." The NAD has demanded AT&T immediately pull all violative materials.
It should be noted that as of the writing of this article, the campaign has yet to be pulled.
The carrier wars just got a referee
Video credit – AT&T
This matters because the entire self-regulatory ad industry hinges on companies playing by the rules. The NAD acts as a neutral party to keep advertising honest. Its power is voluntary, and it relies on "fair dealing" from participants. When a company like AT&T weaponizes the NAD's decisions, it threatens to undermine the entire system.
The landscape was already heating up. After AT&T launched its campaign, T-Mobile fired back, and reports even suggested Verizon was joining the pile-on. It was becoming a classic mud-slinging fest between the "big three."
AT&T's move was a bold strategy, but it completely backfired. They tried to use the industry's referee as part of their attack, and that referee just blew the whistle on them. This gives T-Mobile an easy win, allowing them to pivot from their own advertising issues and just point out that AT&T got publicly scolded for breaking the rules.
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Do you think AT&T should follow through and pull the anti-TMobile ads?
Yes
45.45%
No
54.55%
This is just embarrassing for AT&T
AT&T's attempt to take the high ground by citing an official watchdog just resulted in them getting detention from that same watchdog. You have to wonder who in the marketing department thought this was a good idea and didn't read the rulebook.
It highlights just how petty the carrier ad wars have become. Instead of focusing on clear-cut advantages like network coverage or price, they get tangled in these complex "he said, she said" battles.
For me, this just reaffirms that you should take all carrier advertising with a massive grain of salt. AT&T's strategy failed, and they ended up looking foolish. They not only gave T-Mobile a perfect deflection but also managed to get a public slap on the wrist in the process. It's a great reminder to just ignore the noise and look at the actual plans and service.
We've reached out to AT&T for a comment and will update the story when we have a response.
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