After reading a recent consumer-focused article about counterfeit nicotine products and how legitimate suppliers can guarantee their nicotine pouches are genuine, it struck me how much bigger the issue of counterfeiting has become, especially for businesses operating in retail, food, technology and professional services.
Counterfeits are no longer limited to imitation handbags sold in back alleys. They are embedded in supply chains, circulating through online marketplaces and increasingly appearing in digital service industries. The challenge today is not just identifying fake physical products, but also recognising imitation services and AI-assisted “experts” that deliver little more than repackaged generic output.
For UK businesses, this shift demands a more sophisticated response.
Retail and Food: Counterfeits With Real-World Consequences
The retail sector has long wrestled with fake goods, electronics, cosmetics, clothing and luxury items remain common targets. But in recent years, food fraud has drawn particular attention.
Examples include:
- Olive oil diluted with cheaper seed oils
- Honey blended with sugar syrups
- Fish mislabelled as premium species
- Counterfeit alcohol sold in unregulated supply chains
These are not harmless deceptions. For individuals with allergies, food fraud can present a genuine health risk. For retailers and restaurants, a single authenticity scandal can damage brand equity built over decades.
Even regulated markets such as non-tobacco nicotine products have faced counterfeit risks, highlighting that no category is immune when demand rises and margins are attractive.
Construction and Infrastructure: Lessons From the Past
The UK has learned difficult lessons about fake or substandard materials. Historical failures in building safety, where poor-quality components were used or construction standards ignored, demonstrate that cutting corners can have catastrophic outcomes.
The wider point is simple: counterfeiting and substitution are rarely victimless crimes. They erode trust, create safety risks and undermine legitimate operators who follow the rules.
The New Frontier: Counterfeit Services
While fake goods remain a serious issue, a quieter transformation is taking place in the services economy.
Today, it is possible for an individual armed with publicly available AI tools to:
- Offer “marketing strategy” built from generic templates
- Produce “expert analysis” generated in seconds
- Deliver SEO reports compiled from automated dashboards
- Sell business plans assembled from widely available prompts
To a client unfamiliar with the technology, the output may appear polished and professional. But the underlying value, human expertise, industry insight, contextual judgement, may be absent.
This is not about the responsible use of AI. Many firms integrate artificial intelligence into high-quality professional workflows. The issue arises when AI output is sold as deep expertise without transparency or added value.
In effect, we are seeing the rise of counterfeit services: products that imitate professional work but lack the substance clients believe they are paying for.
Why This Matters for Business
For retailers and hospitality businesses, counterfeit goods can lead to:
- Legal exposure
- Regulatory penalties
- Reputational damage
- Loss of consumer trust
For companies procuring services, counterfeit expertise can result in:
- Poor strategic decisions
- Ineffective marketing campaigns
- Wasted budgets
- Operational inefficiencies
In a digital economy built on trust and reputation, these risks compound quickly.
Practical Recommendations for Businesses
Addressing counterfeiting, physical or digital, requires layered protection.
1. Strengthen Supply Chain Transparency
Retailers and restaurants should:
- Vet suppliers rigorously
- Request third-party certification
- Implement traceability systems
- Conduct periodic independent testing
Technologies such as blockchain-based tracking and QR authentication codes are increasingly viable for mid-sized businesses.
2. Improve Procurement Standards for Services
When commissioning external services:
- Define measurable deliverables and KPIs
- Request case studies with verifiable outcomes
- Conduct paid pilot projects before long-term contracts
- Ask directly how AI tools are used in workflow
Transparency is not a red flag, it is a professional standard.
3. Build Internal Literacy Around AI
Executives and managers should understand:
- What AI can realistically produce
- Where human expertise adds value
- How to distinguish between automation and insight
Internal awareness reduces the likelihood of being misled by surface-level sophistication.
4. Use Technology to Detect Fraud
Tools now exist to:
- Identify plagiarism or recycled content
- Verify product authenticity
- Flag supply chain irregularities
- Analyse ingredient composition
The same technological revolution enabling fraud can also help combat it.
Regulation and Consumer Awareness
UK regulators continue to adapt to evolving counterfeit markets, particularly online. However, enforcement alone is not sufficient.
Consumer education plays a crucial role. Just as awareness campaigns have informed the public about product authenticity risks in various sectors, businesses must proactively communicate their standards and safeguards.
Clear labelling, transparent sourcing information and visible quality assurance processes reassure customers and differentiate legitimate operators from opportunistic imitators.
Trust as Competitive Advantage
Perhaps the most important takeaway is this: authenticity is no longer assumed.
Businesses that can demonstrate traceability, quality control and genuine expertise will hold a competitive advantage. In contrast, those that rely on opacity or superficial presentation risk being grouped with lower-quality operators.
Counterfeiting has evolved. It now spans goods, services and digital outputs. It touches retailers, restaurants, construction suppliers and professional service firms alike.
But so too have the tools to prevent it.
For forward-thinking businesses, investing in verification, transparency and accountability is not merely defensive. It is strategic.
In an economy where customers increasingly question what is real, the companies that can prove their authenticity will be the ones that endure.
David Prior
David Prior is the editor of Today News, responsible for the overall editorial strategy. He is an NCTJ-qualified journalist with over 20 years’ experience, and is also editor of the award-winning hyperlocal news title Altrincham Today. His LinkedIn profile is here.









































































