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Sam Decker, Chief Marketing Officer at Bazaarvoice, sorts the hype from the facts.
When a retailer is considering embracing user generated content, there are two questions often raised.
The first one - what about negative reviews? - is the easiest to address as 80% of reviews are positive*.
The second question is - what about fraudulent reviews?. In answer to this we want to say ‘What about them? What makes us think this is a big problem?’.
Mark Twain wrote: “The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.” Hype and edge-case thinking ensures that every so often we run into companies with this concern when they are considering adding the customer voice to their sites.
So, first it’s important to put this issue into rational context before we over-engineer solutions to an exaggerated problem.
With the rise of user generated content and reviews, occasionally a company gets caught making the mistake of posting user generated content in their favour.
This, of course, gets a lot of press and attention. Is the attention these stories get a barometer for the frequency of fraudulent reviews? On the odd occasion this does happen, how does it compare to the volume of authentic participation?
Or is it that in this age of consumer participation an action like this may increase the outrage and coverage, and therefore awareness? And logically, isn’t this awareness itself a deterrent for every other manufacturer, hotel or author not to make the same mistake?
The risk of posting a fraudulent blog, review, forum comment or any other type of user generated content far outweighs the reputation cost.
An executive who enjoys their job would not endorse or pay the salary of someone to engage in this practice. Who would take that job anyway?
Frankly, it’s unlikely that large manufacturers and brands have the competency, focus and resources to keep up a ‘fraudulent reviews’ operation.
That’s the first and easy answer to the fraudulent reviews question.
It’s logical, and most people are savvy enough to trust their judgment if they suspect they’re reading fraudulent user generated content.
When the issue does arise, it should of course be taken seriously – and there are several ways for online retailers in particular to deal with such a situation.
Whatever tactic you take to avoid fraudulent reviews, you must make sure that it doesn’t deter your best customers from participating.
You shouldn’t limit the number and type customers who can participate, because they are part of the solution.
After working with 150 online retailers over the past two years, we’ve found that a balanced approach encourages participation while deterring and identifying fraudulent activity.
Here are the best practices:
Finally, if none of the logic or deterrents convinces you, purchase verification for accepting reviews is always an option.
Through email or ‘my account’ verification we can identify if the person writing the review is a customer. However, Bazaarvoice has implemented ratings and reviews platforms for over 100 multi-channel retailers, and none of them chose this approach.
There are two reasons for this. First, you prevent participation of offline – those buying in-store - customers. We’ve found that with the right promotion, over a third of a multi-channel retailer’s review volume can come from store customers.
These customers create reviews that help drive conversion and help discredit any possible fraudulent review.
Secondly, if some reviews have a purchase verification ‘badge’ and others don’t, it makes the store customers’ reviews (without verification badge) look less credible, which in turn diminishes the credibility of the overall rating for that product.
Verification (and verification badging) may be a good option for online-only brands, but not for multi-channel retailers.
So, while there will always be unscrupulous people who abuse the trust of consumers by posting fake user generated content, we can rest assured that they are few and far between.
We can outsmart them with technology and business processes, while consumers possess perhaps the cleverest thing of all: instinct.
*From millions of reviews submitted across 150 Bazaarvoice clients in 15 different industries over the past two years, 80% are positive.
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