Yelp Review From My Customer Removed
-
Hi,
A customer of mine told me she created a yelp account just to give me a review. She's a good customer and wanted to show me her appreciation. I thanked her for taking the trouble. About a week later, I see that her review was marked as "not recommended." This was a legitimate review made by a real customer. I'm angry that it was removed for no reason. I noticed a competitor of mine has 18 yelp reviews and all of them show up just fine. I also noticed that this same competitor is paying for ads from Yelp. A couple of years ago, another customer reviewed me on yelp and it was also labeled as "not recommended." So I now have 2 "not recommended" reviews on Yelp that, if you ask me, imply that my reviews are fake. After Yelp and Yahoo merged, I lost the 14 Yahoo reviews I had obtained from customers over the last six years. I have also noticed over the years, that whenever I need to sign into my Yelp business account to update the data, it's locked until some pushy sales person calls and asks to speak to me in order to try to sell me ads on Yelp. Anyone else hate Yelp? They're obviously not really interested in making sure reviews are "real," they're just interested in selling expensive ads.
-
I didn't ask my customer for a review. She was so happy with our service that she did this on her own and then told me about it. That's how I know it was placed in the filtered area on Yelp. I don't bother with Yelp at all.
-
Thanks for the response. I agree with you. The only bad thing is that I had 14 Yahoo reviews for my business that took years to acquire from customers. They all disappeared when Yelp took over for Yahoo. I now have 1 Yelp review and 3 they call "not recommended." I'm actually showing up lower on the local Yahoo map because I have 1 review now instead of 14. When I told my customer what Yelp did, she was nice enough to go to Google to leave the review.
-
We have been round and round with this as well. Most likely it is from the user having just created an account, and with no other activity left a good review for your business. When we have people leave reviews for clients on Yelp, we always ask that they go out and leave a few for places they like before leaving a review. This helps the account to be seen as more "realistic".
I remember a case where companies began suing people that left reviews.
And I'll just leave this here:
Link"John may sound paranoid, but he's got company. During interviews with dozens of business owners over a span of several months, six people told this newspaper that Yelp sales representatives promised to move or remove negative reviews if their business would advertise. In another six instances, positive reviews disappeared — or negative ones appeared — after owners declined to advertise."
In my opinion, get people to leave reviews for your business on Google places. Yelp's review system and business practices seem to be driven more towards monetary gain.
*edit BTW, I would not advertise on Yelp. We have tried it many times, using different techniques and it never pays for itself. The truth about Yelp ads is: unless people are seaching on Yelp for your services, they won't find you. It's true that your Yelp profile might come up in organic Google search results, but paying for ads on Yelp wont help that any. Most are going to search on Google, and I would dedicate my focus to improving your position in those results.
-
Here is a good piece that will shine some light on your trouble.
http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2013/01/yelps-rocky-relationship-with-small-business029/
-
Yelp does state in several places for businesses to not ask customers to review their site, such as https://biz.yelp.com/support/review_solicitation.
-
More than likely the reason it was removed is that it was considered spam. One way that Yelp detects spam is from new accounts that open and leave one review to never be logged into again. I went round and round with this, because /i actually ran a promotion where /i gave people a discount to leave a review. It was basically wasted money.
-
We work very closely with our customers, and reviews are a huge part of our strategy. We list all of the places customers can review us here. Yelp is the bain of review strategies. They are regarded as the most legitimate review company, but they also make it harder to leave reviews than any other site. Then, after all that, they call you and offer you advertising so that you can get more reviews that will be flagged by their spam filter. I do truly believe that they have de-coupled reviews from their ad sales, just as they claim they do, but I've also never seen a more aggressive ad sales team than Yelp, and it creates a huge amount of suspicion for those who aren't sure what Yelp is all about.
Anyhow, there are a few ways to get reviews to stick. We actually ask our users not to post on our Yelp page anymore unless they specifically tell us they have a Yelp account in good standing whose reviews stick. As you can see, that's very few people. Our page has 2 reviews (just as a point of fact, the 1-star review you see filtered was left by one of our competitors and we were very glad it got filtered, though it is upsetting that Yelp shows the negative reviews first in filtered section. That said, we have just as few Angie's List reviews, and the only reason it's less upsetting is because Angie's List is a bit of a walled garden. So, our expectation is that it's hard to get a review there. Just like Yelp, we only ask for an Angie's List review if someone indicates that they have an account on Angie's List. We also run the check against Angie's List accounts from time to time. The other, kind of odd strategy, that I have employed in the past for customers whom have a very good relationship with us, is I send them an email every 2 months asking them to basically use their Yelp account. Yelp's review filter works until Yelp decides the account as legitimate. This is done a lot of ways, but mainly, you need to convince the person to use the account. When I was doing agency, I had good results with that strategy.
-
Thanks for the response. There are naturally going to be more new people creating Yelp accounts when they try to review a business they find on Yahoo as the two have merged. I really think if you pay Yelp for ads they will let your reviews stay. They are corrupt in my opinion. I'll encourage anyone who tells me they want to leave me a review not to do so at Yahoo or Yelp. It's always about the money. As I said earlier, my competitor has 18 Yelp reviews, in our very small town, and none of them have been labeled "not recommended." I also notice he pays them for ads.
-
It could be that it was flagged as fishy, since the person created an account and left just one positive review.
I've seen complaints about how Yelp filters reviews from new accounts, and how it may more heavily impact companies where it's a one-time service with large fees. I'm thinking specifically a complaint someone had that a moving company had a bunch of poor reviews that were filtered. The reviews were left by people that were so frustrated with this company they created a Yelp account solely to warn other people (because this was a high-dollar purchase, unlike just a meal out at a restaurant), they were legitimate reviews, but looked suspicious to Yelp's algorithms.
No solution for you here, but a possible explanation.
-
Thanks for the link but there wasn't anything over there about Yelp removing legitimate, positive reviews.
-
There are several questions about Yelp removing reviews in Moz Q&A. Here is a recent one with lots of background information.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
I'm wondering if reviews services like yotpo and reviews.io are worth it.
The reviews services advertise that your reviews and stars will be placed in your Google search results and this helps with rankings. Does anyone have experience using Yotpo or Reviews.io with a brick and mortar business? Or, any business for that matter? Thanks,
Reviews and Ratings | | Jarod45660 -
User ganarated reviews and SEO
Have ideas on how to present hundreds of user ganarated reviews on website in a Google friendly way? "Load more" / calling APIs / or pagination seems to have disadvantages for ranking for this content. Any suggestions, inspiration, tools and articles appreciated.
Reviews and Ratings | | Joseph-Green-SEO0 -
BazaarVoice Paginated Reviews Not Honoring Canonical & Indexing Multiple Pages
If there are enough reviews on a product page to warrant page 2, 3 etc, BazaarVoice appends the below snippets to each new page of reviews, which are then also indexed, despite BazaarVoice SEO settings that automate a canonical tag (seemingly since the differing reviews on each page are not similar enough to honor the canonical). <cite class="iUh30">?bvstate=pg:2/ct:r</cite> <cite class="iUh30">?bvstate=pg:3/ct:r</cite> It seems Target.com has found a way to hack the BV code to create a dedicated page to view all reviews: https://www.target.com/p/ultra-soft-fitted-sheet-300-thread-count-threshold-153/-/A-13973172?showOnlyReview=true While Ikea.com blocks it in the Robots file (defeats SEO value) - Noindex: */catalog/products/bvroute=Review Noindex: */catalog/products/bvtab Tons of brands apparently have the issue, and you can see more examples if you search "inurl:bvstate=pg" Anyone aware of a solution to this?
Reviews and Ratings | | Eroc2 -
Client wants to delete Google My Business Due to Bad Review
My client has received a bad review on Google and although has other good ones, wants to delete the current Google My Business page and open a new one. I disagree with this strategy but need some evidence to back it up. They are ranking well and so I don't want to upset the cart. I need reasons not to in terms of potentially harming rankings. Am I right that this could impact?
Reviews and Ratings | | AL123al3 -
Marking up an iframe with reviews schema. Possible? Ethical?
Hey there fellow Mozzers! I work with a broad variety of clients, many of them local businesses, and they in turn sometimes find a vendor that stumps me. This is one of those special cases, where the vendor is doing some shady stuff with reviews schema. First, they're taking reviews from third party sites and filtering them to only show 4 and 5 star reviews (red flag #1), then they're asking us to post them to the website (red flag #2) and finally they are marking them up with schema (red flag #3). If this were my vendor I would have fired them when they started telling me Google doesn't care, doesn't enforce the guidelines, and all that other nonsense, but hey, I'm not the client and I have to make good for them. I did flat out refuse to place these reviews as they asked, but they came back with a "solution", that I'm not sure I trust. They're telling me they can't remove the schema (red flag #4), but they can iframe it onto the website. Their logic, which is wrong, is that Google can't/doesn't crawl iframes so therefore the reviews can be displayed without any negative consequence. I obviously have some ethical concerns with this, but I have to provide the service to my client whether or not they share my values. However, I can object on professional grounds if I think they will take on undue risk. My only problem here is that I have no documentation for how this proposed solution would work. Working through this logically still leaves me with a gap, and that's where you folks come in!
Reviews and Ratings | | brettmandoes
A) We know that Google crawls iframes
B) We know that Google can apply schema within iframes (works with YouTube embeds)
C) We know that content within an iframe is technically on another website, so it doesn't normally apply to your website
D) I don't know how specifically reviews schema would interact with an iframe
E) I don't know if this would result in Google triggering an alarm and blocking the business I'm hoping you guys can help me figure this out. Ethics aside (making me cringe to type that) is this technically feasible without risk, or would this still be a risky move? For the record, another client tried filtering their reviews while marking up with schema against my recommendation and got caught, and received a penalty alert. They were removed from results until the problem was fixed.0 -
Does advertising on Yelp help a business get more Yelp reviews?
I've gotten this question from a few clients. There seems to be a correlation in some cases between paying to advertise on Yelp, and the volume of reviews received. Of course, correlation does not necessarily equal causation. And I can attest to the fact that other clients who have at times advertised on Yelp did not even see a correlation. Has anyone else seen this correlation? And if so, can you speak to the possible causation or lack thereof?
Reviews and Ratings | | irapasternack0 -
Having Yelp Reviews Removed
Since we all work with Yelp on a local basis, I believe many are aware that if a review is placed by a non customer about a company, Yelp will typically remove them if you show that it isn't valid, etc. We all know they made a show of outing those who posted fake reviews as well. Here is a question I have though: Have any of you been aware of Yelp taking down valid negative reviews for companies? I have just run into this and find it somewhat perplexing. If you know of this, I would love to hear how it happens? Thanks,
Reviews and Ratings | | RobertFisher2 -
Google plus review - how to ask
I found a way (finally!) to find out which of my customers who have a gmail account have also a Google plus account. That helps a lot. We use to send handout reviews or video instructions about how to create a Google plus account...and it didn't go to well. Now that we know they have a G+ account , all we have to do is ask for a review; how to do this?
Reviews and Ratings | | echo1
What are the latest strategies so that the review will stay there? have them log in, search for the business name and write the review? give them the direct link? is the searcher's path important? should we look for users who are engaged more in their circles? Thanks!0