Our comment
- 'Why pay [a review site] when Google reviews are free?'
- 'Why pay [a review site] when Google reviews have far higher visibility?'
- 'Why pay [a review site] when Google reviews have greater credibility?'
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has begun action, initially against five businesses (including the review site Feefo) for alleged breaches of its regulations relating to reviews. A question that crops up not infrequently is 'How would a business be caught?' or words to that effect.
Here is the answer.
First, let's look at the CMA. Here are the relevant staffing levels (out of a total of just over 1,000):
Key Departments: The staff are distributed across units such as Competition Enforcement (131), Consumer Protection and Markets (118), and the Digital Markets Unit (70). Specialists: The CMA employs about 120 economists, econometricians, and statisticians, alongside a 40-person data and technology team
There have been three important events in the last eighteen months regarding online reviews that every business should be aware of:
1. Does your business selectively invite customers to write reviews, either to a review site or to Google (or both)?2. Does your business employ any mechanism - a formal survey or a simple 'were you happy with our service?' type email to identify 'happy customers' before inviting them to write a review?
3. Does your business have control over the timing of reviews written by your customers?
4. Can your customers only write reviews of your business if specifically invited to do so?
5. Does your business use a review site - Trustpilot, Feefo etc. - to identify those customers most likely to leave a 5* review and then invite those, and only those, to post a review to Google?
The name, with hindsight, probably gave us a clue. So what are we talking about here? It's a 'miracle' pressure washer. And if you watch YouTube at all, you will have seen their advertisements in the last three weeks - perfectly timed for the Easter/Spring garden/DIY spending surge.
Here is just one of their websites.
Let's take a look...
Note the prominently displayed stars and score (4.8), as well as the tab, which leads to these...
The point at issue here is that unscrupulous businesses - in this case, the parent appears to be a company called 'Cablelinker' based, again 'allegedly' in Hong Kong - can bypass the conventional online review channels entirely to make a quick buck. There are undoubtedly tens of thousands of unhappy new 'owners' of one of these seriously misrepresented and overpriced product (£50 in the UK - the same product can be had for £10 by searching Google shopping).
We will forward this article to the CMA in the hope that the advertisements on YouTube can be shut down.
First of all: why is this 'important'?
Because a large proportion of consumers have come to rely on reviews before making purchases or engaging services. If those reviews are gathered or displayed in ways that in any way favour the business at the expense of the consumer, then the CMA has a legal duty to step in.
In addition, if consumers lose confidence in online reviews as a resource, then they lose a valuable aid to decision-making when considering such purchases, and the businesses themselves lose valuable social proof.
The CMA Action
Here is a summary of the reasons behind the action being taken by the CMA:Feefo and Autotrader are under investigation over whether they denied consumers a "fully rounded" picture online of other people's experiences by not including some bad reviews.
Just Eat is being probed over whether its rating system inflated certain restaurants' and grocers' star ratings.
Dignity is being investigated over whether it asked staff to write positive reviews about the firm's cremation services, giving people "a potentially inaccurate picture" of customers' feedback.
Pasta Evangelists is being looked at to see whether customers were offered discounts on future orders in exchange for leaving 5-star reviews on delivery apps without this being disclosed.
Here is the full CMA press release. We suggest you read the full text here, along with our comments, and refer to the original for links.
Comments
Regular readers will know that we have been banging the drum for Google reviews since the beginning of the 2010s; we may even have, wrongly, of course, given the impression to some that we only focus on Google reviews on our clients' behalf.
The following have been our priorities for well over a decade, and we cannot see them changing any time soon:
Trustpilot's recent results brought AI firmly into the reviews spotlight. Read this from Proactive Investors...
Regular readers may be mildly surprised to hear that we agree with every word.
Let's now look at a ChatGPT local search; the kind of search millions make every day:
Don't discount Google reviews. We certainly don't; they are the ultimate goal for almost all of our clients. Here is the client's Google Knowledge Panel.