CASL Checklists & Precedents: Sender Identification Information & Unsubscribe Mechanism

Do you need checklists and precedents to help your company or organization comply with the sender identification and unsubscribe requirements of Canada’s federal anti-spam legislation (CASL)?

Our firm offers many types of precedents/forms to help companies, associations, other types of organizations and individuals comply with CASL, including our Sender Identification Information and Unsubscribe Mechanism checklists and precedents.

This CASL (Canadian anti-spam law) Checklist and Precedents Package includes: checklists for sender identification information for commercial electronic messages (CEMs) (including CEMs sent on behalf of a third party), a checklist for the unsubscribe mechanism for CEMs, precedent sender identification language, precedent unsubscribe language and information for unsubscribe menus for recipients (i.e., where recipients can choose a blanket opt-out from CEMs or only opt out from specific types of communications). Four pages.

For more information or to order our Sender Identification Information and Unsubscribe Mechanism checklists and precedents, as well as information about our other Canadian CASL precedents, checklists and CASL compliance program available for download, see: Canadian CASL (Anti-Spam Law) Precedents and Forms.

For more information about Canadian anti-spam law (CASL), see: Anti-Spam Law (CASL), Anti-Spam Law (CASL) Compliance, Common Anti-Spam Law (CASL) Compliance Errors and Anti-Spam Law (CASL) FAQs.

If you need CASL advice for a marketing campaign or other electronic marketing, contact us: Contact.

____________________

SERVICES AND CONTACT

We help clients practically navigate Canada’s advertising and marketing laws and offer Canadian advertising law services in relation to print, online, new media, social media and e-mail marketing.

Our Canadian advertising law services include advice in relation to: anti-spam legislation (CASL); Competition Bureau complaints; the general misleading advertising provisions of the Competition Act; Internet, new media and social media advertising and marketing; promotional contests (sweepstakes); and sales and promotions. We also provide advice relating to specific types of advertising issues, including performance claims, testimonials, disclaimers and native advertising.

To contact us about a potential legal matter see: contact

For more information about our firm, visit our website: Competitionlawyer.ca

This entry was posted in Advertising Law, Anti-spam Law, Articles, Associations, Competition Law, Compliance, Consumer Protection, CRTC, Do Not Call List, Electronic Marketing, New Publications, News, Online Advertising, Publications, Sectors - Broadcasting, Sectors - Internet & New Media, Sectors - Media, Sectors - Retail, Sectors - Telecommunications, Social media marketing, Targeted Advertising. Bookmark the permalink.