Tag Archives: Angie’s List

Customer reviews on sites such as Yelp and Angie’s List have long posed major challenges to companies in industries like retail and hospitality. But now—especially with the advent of Google My Business— customer review sites reach every industry, and are a potential concern for every company.

How your company lands on review sites

If your organization is listed in public telephone directories, information about it is most likely published on a variety of content aggregators as well as on consumer review sites like Google My Business. Those sites often make the decision for you. In some cases, you often can’t opt out.

There are numerous consumer review sites on the Internet. Many work to maintain the integrity of their forums, but often their primary interest is in driving reader engagement—not protecting your company’s brand. The more businesses they have listed, the more visitors they attract.  The more clicks they receive, the more advertising revenue the site can charge.

Fortunately, there are steps you can take to ensure your business is represented better on review sites. The most proactive is using a review management service.

What review management services do

Review management services work by monthly subscription. They provide clients with a dashboard where they can monitor over numerous online review sites in real time as well as with aboveboard methods to invite customers to review your company or services.

As positive and legitimate reviews come in, you can amplify their exposure by publishing them on many online platforms after establishing a profile about your business on them. This does not prevent negative reviews from appearing on review sites. Instead, it simply posts the reviews you choose to emphasize on social media and review sites—providing an effective counterbalance to reviews that may be biased, or have low credibility but high visibility.

Review management services also work to make your company’s website more visible to search engines. A key way of improving a website’s SEO (search engine optimization) is to increase the number of highly ranked sites that link to it. By allowing you to easily create profiles for your company across many review sites, review management companies also allow you to create many such inbound links from high-ranking platforms.

Review management sites aren’t right for every business.  Many companies do not have storefronts and do not actively market their services and products to widespread groups of consumers.  They are less likely to utilize review management services and more likely to remain detached from the online review space.

If your business would benefit from taking more control over your brand, though, it is a service worth looking into.

Related reading: How to Handle Bad Reviews

Naveen Gupta, CEO of Birdeye, on Managing Online Reviews

 
 

Felony extortion charges were recently filed in Dallas against a man who purported to provide online reputation management (ORM) services, but threatened to undermine a client’s reputation as a way of demanding payment. It isn’t the first such incident. The episode highlights the unregulated nature of this industry, and some of its dangers. While protecting and managing one’s online reputation is becoming increasingly vital for businesses and individuals, it’s necessary to proceed with caution and discretion when seeking help. Read more

The Dark Side

In her 2013 Forbes.com post “The Dark Side Of Reputation Management: How It Affects Your Business,” Snapp Conner PR’s Cheryl Conner warned of “mugshot extortionists,” which NPR has also investigated, and other questionable and sometimes unlawful practices. In June 2013, Graeme Woods’ investigative article, Scrubbed: The World of Black-Ops Reputation Management, was published in New York Magazine.

Some companies offer to remove explicit photos or phony reviews from websites like Google Places, Yelp and Angie’s List—a promise that is often impossible to keep. Even Yelp itself has faced (unverified) accusations that it “filters out positive reviews and allows negative ones through, particularly if the restaurant in question has refused to purchase advertising,” according to Eater.com.

How to Avoid Such Practices

How to avoid such deceptive practices?  Be sure to focus on trusted and verified sources when researching a firm with a specialization in online reputation management. We offer helpful advice in, How to Hire the Right Online Reputation Management Firm.

I encourage consumers to check the provider’s online information to see if they address your specific goals and are experienced in servicing your sector. Evaluate whether they specialize in a niche – including your area – or are generalists. Understand what ORM is and whether the goals you want addressed are possible – or can be guaranteed. If not, make sure you know what to expect.

Be Wary of Guarantees to Remove Content

“If an ORM company contacts you directly offering to delete or eliminate a bad review or demote the review for $X dollars, don’t take them up on the offer,” advises interactive media agency Small Screen Producer. It is very unlikely they can make such content simply disappear.  Instead, ORM firms focus on reducing the impact that negative or misleading information from third parties will have on your online image. Such strategies can include moving down unwanted content onto lower pages. But it can return to prominence within weeks if continuous maintence is not applied.

In a world of waning industries, online reputation management is booming. So are consumer misunderstandings about what the practice entails and what results you can expect.

Related reading:

Your Online Reputation Checklist: Evaluating Your Internet Image

The Many Uses of Online Reputation Management: A Partial List

The Essentials: Online Reputation Management FAQs