Kennyz wrote:As a potential Yelp reader, I am thankful to be aware of such practices, and that awareness allows me to take Yelp reviews with a healthy grain of salt.
jimswside wrote:Kennyz wrote:As a potential Yelp reader, I am thankful to be aware of such practices, and that awareness allows me to take Yelp reviews with a healthy grain of salt.
Good points,
and I think you summed up Yelp best with the above statement.
Pie Lady wrote:I'm not surprised either. I always noticed that the posts were never in chronological order for some reason, and now I have the reason.
Santander wrote:Some of these same folks are scared of posting on LTH, fearing our "intensity," as one of them put it.
anniee8m wrote:As the manager of a business I have been approached by the Yelp staff and offered positive review placement and was told that I could pick 1 review to be deleted from the site if we chose to advertise. We also always get phone calls from yelp salesmen a day after we've received a nice new review on the site. Who knows? Coincidence?
Anyways, it breaks my heart when we get poor reviews on the site, and it seriously irritates me when I am familiar with whatever situation prompted the review and the reviewer exaggerates or lies for the sake of a funnier/meaner review. Plus my staff gets really hurt too, do you have to call out the "heavy server", assume the Latino busser doesn't speak English or claim that you tipped your waiter $50 when you didn't?
Anyways- it felt really nice to vent- (since I can't on Yelp)
anniee8m wrote:We also always get phone calls from yelp salesmen a day after we've received a nice new review on the site. Who knows? Coincidence?
anniee8m wrote:and was told that I could pick 1 review to be deleted from the site if we chose to advertise.
Kennyz wrote:No you don't. Yelp is very clear about how the order of reviews is determined. First of all, they come right out and say that if you are a Yelp sponsor, you get to choose one review that is your favorite, and have that review appear at the top of the list. So yes, the sales people say that if you buy advertising, we can move a positive ad to the top of the list. It can be from years ago, and is marked clear-as-day as the restaurant's favorite review. How the Tribune neglected to include this very germain data point is beyond me. The order after that is determined partially by recency, and partially by a vote among users. Yelp users get to select how useul they think a given review is: those deemed more useful than others are moved toward the top of the list.
Look, I don't find Yelp all that exciting, but the treatment it's getting here is unfair, based on conjecture, and full of inaccurate information.
jesteinf wrote:anniee8m wrote:and was told that I could pick 1 review to be deleted from the site if we chose to advertise.
If the site doesn't disclose this practice to users, then I think that's a problem (unless you just consider Yelp to be a big ad site, in which case anything goes I guess).
Kennyz wrote:jesteinf wrote:anniee8m wrote:and was told that I could pick 1 review to be deleted from the site if we chose to advertise.
If the site doesn't disclose this practice to users, then I think that's a problem (unless you just consider Yelp to be a big ad site, in which case anything goes I guess).
The site explicitly says that this is NEVER done. If the offer was really made to anniee8m, it was done by a person violating company policy, and I suspect that person would be fired if management found out. I don't doubt the possibility that it happened, as it is widely known that sales people in any industry who are compensated on results are prone to misleading potential customers in order to get the sale. Plus, this is Illinois.
Kennyz wrote:Pie Lady wrote:I'm not surprised either. I always noticed that the posts were never in chronological order for some reason, and now I have the reason.
No you don't. Yelp is very clear about how the order of reviews is determined. First of all, they come right out and say that if you are a Yelp sponsor, you get to choose one review that is your favorite, and have that review appear at the top of the list. So yes, the sales people say that if you buy advertising, we can move a positive ad to the top of the list. It can be from years ago, and is marked clear-as-day as the restaurant's favorite review. How the Tribune neglected to include this very germain data point is beyond me. The order after that is determined partially by recency, and partially by a vote among users. Yelp users get to select how useul they think a given review is: those deemed more useful than others are moved toward the top of the list.
Look, I don't find Yelp all that exciting, but the treatment it's getting here is unfair, based on conjecture, and full of inaccurate information.
Khaopaat wrote:unless they've changed it recently, their "About Us" page makes it sound like they define themselves as a repository of online advertisements that happens to have a ton of user reviews (http://www.yelp.com/about
Santander wrote:Khaopaat wrote:unless they've changed it recently, their "About Us" page makes it sound like they define themselves as a repository of online advertisements that happens to have a ton of user reviews (http://www.yelp.com/about
This should not be overlooked. Both Yelp and the majority of its posters (at least the ones I know) understand what the site is all about. As Ebert would say, "how it goes about being about it" is the more important aspect, and I think there is enough transparency there for those who care to investigate.
Even though the reviews get moved up and down based on commercially-linked "relevance" (which is honestly the way the int4rweb5 work today), I want to again underline two high-value aspects of the site:
1. places for which only one or two reviews exist which would be otherwise off the radar
2. profile histories of certain posters you trust. The same way posters build up a reputation and posting track record here, there are some stellar and very reliable profiles on Yelp. Within these profiles, things don't seem to be manipulated by commercial forces. I've had great tips from Yelping friends.
Darren72 wrote:Well put, Kennyz. I'll also add that the order of reviews on Amazon.com are also based on some combination of usefulness and date. In both cases, Yelp and Amazon, you can sort reviews based on date and other criteria. This really shouldn't be an issue.
gleam wrote:Darren72 wrote:Well put, Kennyz. I'll also add that the order of reviews on Amazon.com are also based on some combination of usefulness and date. In both cases, Yelp and Amazon, you can sort reviews based on date and other criteria. This really shouldn't be an issue.
Except I don't recall Amazon ever offering authors/publishers/manufacturers the ability to have negative reviews removed from the site.
Kennyz wrote:gleam wrote:Darren72 wrote:Well put, Kennyz. I'll also add that the order of reviews on Amazon.com are also based on some combination of usefulness and date. In both cases, Yelp and Amazon, you can sort reviews based on date and other criteria. This really shouldn't be an issue.
Except I don't recall Amazon ever offering authors/publishers/manufacturers the ability to have negative reviews removed from the site.
And you recall this happening with Yelp? Or do you simply recall reading irresponsibly reported newspaper articles and one post about this from a person in this thread? Again, this is 100% against Yelp policy.
Mhays wrote:The real issue to consumers is: can I trust reviews on Yelp? If so, you don't need answers to the questions posed here. You can test the usefulness of the site the way you'd judge any critic, by whether you tend to agree or disagree with the reviews. You can test them either by looking up places with which you are already familiar, or by following their advice a few times - basically, the short version of how I wound up on LTH.
gleam wrote:Darren72 wrote:Well put, Kennyz. I'll also add that the order of reviews on Amazon.com are also based on some combination of usefulness and date. In both cases, Yelp and Amazon, you can sort reviews based on date and other criteria. This really shouldn't be an issue.
Except I don't recall Amazon ever offering authors/publishers/manufacturers the ability to have negative reviews removed from the site.
Dmnkly wrote:People are objecting to these:
[*]That many restaurant owners have noticed a highly suspicious trend where acceptance of sponsor status results in a sudden rush of good reviews, and refusal of sponsor status is immediately followed by the deletion of multiple positive reviews.
gleam wrote:Let's give Yelp the benefit of the doubt, for a moment. What's the motivation for the restaurants in throwing around groundless accusations like these? What do they stand to gain from it?
Kennyz wrote:gleam wrote:Let's give Yelp the benefit of the doubt, for a moment. What's the motivation for the restaurants in throwing around groundless accusations like these? What do they stand to gain from it?
I really thought this was obvious. Any restaurant with negative reviews has significant motivation to attack the credibility of those reviews.
Darren72 wrote:Mhays wrote:The real issue to consumers is: can I trust reviews on Yelp? If so, you don't need answers to the questions posed here. You can test the usefulness of the site the way you'd judge any critic, by whether you tend to agree or disagree with the reviews. You can test them either by looking up places with which you are already familiar, or by following their advice a few times - basically, the short version of how I wound up on LTH.
I'm not sure what you mean. There are plenty of reviews on LTHForum that I disagree with. I'm sure you disagree with many also. Does that mean we don't trust the site? No. It means we might not want to trust an individual reviewer.
Khaopaat wrote:Annie, just out of curiosity, is it possible to opt out of Yelp completely?
I've always wondered how commercial/for-profit sites like that work...can they maintain basic info & reviews about a business, against the business owner's wishes?
I saw that GEB mentioned that he had had his "account removed", ...
Finally, do you find that being on Yelp affects your business much, negatively or positively? Have you ever encountered any pompous idiots trying to use impending negative Yelp (or any other site) reviews to try to get freebies or special treatment?
Sorry to bombard you with questions...I'm not fully familiar with how a lot of this stuff works, as I stare at a computer all day for a living. One thing is for sure, after the staggering amount of time I've spent on LTHForum today, it's a damn good thing my manager can't Yelp about my performance
Kennyz wrote:Dmnkly wrote:People are objecting to these:
[*]That many restaurant owners have noticed a highly suspicious trend where acceptance of sponsor status results in a sudden rush of good reviews, and refusal of sponsor status is immediately followed by the deletion of multiple positive reviews.
The classic strawman argument rears its head. Many people? Where are these "many people"? I see a handful of people who were likely contacted by a reporter trying to find a story. I am sure I could find way more basketball teams that think the NCAA tournament selection processed is fixed, or scientists who claim that the world is flat, but that doesn't mean there's a story behind those notions.
Dmnkly wrote:How many people and how many cities are necessary before these stories cross from irresponsible to illuminating... Is a double-blind study with thousands of respondants the only thing that will make this an acceptable topic of discussion?