The lender, which recently announced a pre-tax loss of £37.3m in 2014, said the new ads would steer clear of the young and vulnerable.
But it admitted there would be no watershed for TV adverts, which will run during ad breaks of popular soaps.
The payday lender's website has also been overhauled.
Applicants
applying for short-term loans on the site would see clearer
affordability warnings, details of costs if repayments were missed, more
prominent links to debt charities, and a new logo, the company said.
Wonga's adverts featuring puppets were cut in July last year, with
the company saying it did not want to be associated with "anything which
inadvertently attracts children".
It is returning with new TV and
digital adverts, starting on Tuesday, featuring farmers to dental
nurses, who it believes are among a broader group of target customers.
The average customer for a Wonga loan at present is male and aged
between 20 and 35.
"It is clear that the puppets were inappropriate," said Tara Kneafsey, UK chief executive of Wonga.
Wonga
has had to apologise and compensate customers for the use of letters
from fake legal firms, as well as write off unsuitable loans. Ms
Kneafsey said the new adverts did not contain a further apology, as they
aimed to show how the company had moved on.
The lender estimates
there are 13 million people in the UK who are struggling with money and
are turned down by mainstream lenders. This also includes people who are
new to the credit market, such as those moving into the country.
It
said adverts would not be shown on children's TV, or channels or
programmes with a large audience among younger people. Billboards within
50m of a school or college would also not be used for poster adverts.
Wonga
also sponsors Newcastle United football club, but has agreed to remove
its logo from all children's replica shirts from the 2016-17 season.
Affordability checks
The
company, along with other payday lenders, now faces new rules from the
regulator, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), which ruled that
customers must face stricter affordability checks.
The regulator's
main weapon is a cap on the cost of payday loans of 0.8% of the amount
borrowed per day, which came into force in January. As a result, Wonga's
payday loan APR has dropped from 5,853% to 1,509%.
This has already cut the size of the payday lending industry in the UK. Wonga is among those that has seen a big drop in customers and expects to continue making a loss in 2015.
Figures
from the Financial Ombudsman Service show that complaints it received
about payday loans totalled 1,157 in the year to the end of March, up
from 794 the previous year - a 46% rise.
Wonga said it had now
introduced a series of safety net measures for customers, including a
three-day grace period for late repayments before a default fee was
charged, a money-back guarantee for customers who change their minds on
loan applications within 24 hours, and a worst-case scenario box on the
cost of a loan.
It admitted it had "lost its way" under the previous management regime and had considered dropping the Wonga brand.
While
the Wonga name will be retained for the payday loan, other longer-term,
larger loans expected to be launched later in the year could be
advertised under a different name.
Chris Bibby, marketing and
brand director at Wonga, said it would have been "wrong to whitewash it
and pretend to be someone else".
However, Andy Milligan, of
branding experts Caffeine, said that it would not be easy for Wonga to
change its image with new adverts.
He said the company was
carrying a lot of baggage as to whether it was trusted, and it would
also face stiff competition from other players in the sector.
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