HelloFresh fined over millions of spam texts and emails

10 months ago 19
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HelloFresh food boxImage source, HelloFresh

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The ICO found HelloFresh had sent millions of spam emails and texts over a seven-month period

Food delivery company HelloFresh has been fined for sending millions of spam emails and texts to customers.

The recipe box firm was told to pay £140,000 following a 2022 investigation by the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO).

It found 79 million emails and 1 million texts were sent out over a seven-month spamming campaign.

The ICO said it marked a "clear breach of trust." HelloFresh said it had made changes to its SMS and email policy.

Investigations began in March 2022 after 14 complaints were directly made to the regulator, and another 8,729 were made to the 7726 spam message reporting service.

The ICO found HelloFresh continued to contact some individuals even after they had asked it to stop.

It also found customers were not given enough information that their data would be used for marketing for up to 24 months after cancelling their subscriptions.

"Barrage of texts"

Andy Curry, head of investigations at the ICO, said: "This marked a clear breach of trust of the public by HelloFresh.

"Customers weren't told exactly what they'd be opting into, nor was it clear how to opt out. From there, they were hit with a barrage of marketing texts they didn't want or expect, and in some cases, even when they told HelloFresh to stop, the deluge continued."

The ICO said the fine showed "clear and decisive" action would be taken if the law was not followed to protect the right of customers to choose how their data is used.

"The investigation that led to this fine began following complaints filed by the public, both to the ICO and to the 7726 service. This shows just how important it is that if you are being contacted with nuisance calls, texts or emails, that you report it straight away," Mr Curry added.

Image source, HelloFresh

Image caption,

Food retail expert Teresa Wickham said the company's brand would be damaged as well as its bottom line

HelloFresh said its customers were "at the centre of everything we do" and that the company took its data protection obligations "extremely seriously".

In contrast to the 14 complaints that the ICO said it received directly, HelloFresh claimed the regulator received just three.

"We have worked closely with the ICO," the firm said in a statement. "We have carefully considered their feedback and have made changes to our SMS and email policy,"

A tough market

HelloFresh was founded in 2011. Members choose meals from a changing online menu and receive recipes and fresh ingredients in a box once a week ready for cooking. Subscribers are often attracted by deals with up to 60% off their first box.

The recipe box market is "very tough" according to food retail retail expert Teresa Wickham, with competitors including Gusto and the Mindful Chef.

"It's a highly competitive business," Ms Wickham said. "Overhead costs, with labour, electricity and fuel to deliver, are high. But [profit] margins in horticulture and wholesale are quite low. It's cut-throat."

The former supermarket director said the ICO investigation would damage HelloFresh. "Any fine will hurt them," she said. "It will affect their brand and their bottom line."

But Ms Wickham said she felt "really sorry" for the company. "Everyone knows their information is everywhere - this is the world we live in now," she added.

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