comparethemarket.com | |
Private | |
Industry | Finance and insurance |
Founded | 2006 |
Headquarters | Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, UK |
Products | Financial services |
Website | https://www.comparethemarket.com |
comparethemarket.com is a UK price comparison website, founded in 2006, that is part of the BGL Group. The website also offers other on-line companies the ability to provide their customers with a co-branded or white labelled comparison service.
In 2009 the company launched an advertising campaign featuring a series of meerkat characters, after which it became the third-largest price comparison website in the UK.
The website was set up by Budget Group (now BGL Group) in early 2006, following a decision to sell its high street business to Swinton.
In 2012, Comparethemarket.com.au launched its comparison service in Australia. The Australian company's television advertisements also feature the meerkat characters Aleksandr Orlov and his Head of IT, Sergei. However, these ads differ from the UK’s, with one such storyline revealing the meerkats have purchased comparethemarket.com.au.
Compare the Market allows customers to compare prices on a number of insurance products including car, home, van, life, pet, travel and over 50s insurance. It has also expanded in to the comparison of items that can be switched such as energy/utilities, broadband and digital TV, as well as a range of financial products such as loans, credit cards and ISAs.
On 5 January 2009, the company launched an advertising campaign featuring a CGI Russian meerkat character named "Aleksandr Orlov" who pleads with viewers looking for cheap car insurance to stop confusing his meerkat comparison website comparethemeerkat.com with comparethemarket.com, due to the similarity between the words meerkat and market. As part of the campaign, Comparethemeerkat.com was created which does indeed allow visitors to compare meerkats.
In August 2009 an opinion piece in The Guardian newspaper accused the advert series of racism for mocking Eastern European accents. However, the Advertising Standards Authority stated that it had not received any similar complaints.