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Two-thirds of consumers say fake reviews are a growing problem—what can your brand do?

by | Nov 16, 2021 | Public Relations

Because nearly 90 percent of online consumers consult reviews before buying, reviews have become a high-stakes issue for businesses. Positive reviews help businesses rank in search results and lead to more conversions. New research from CX solutions firm Uberall shows that two-thirds (67 percent) of consumers are concerned about review fraud—and most people cannot spot inauthentic reviews.

The firm’s new report, The State of Online Review Fraud, analyzes four million local business reviews on Google, Facebook, Yelp and Tripadvisor. This is the first report to take on the growing problem of fake reviews at this level of scale.

Two-thirds of consumers say fake reviews a growing problem—what can your brand do?

The study, conducted in partnership with The Transparency Company, used sophisticated machine learning and natural language processing techniques to identify inauthentic reviews across 19 popular local business categories and top U.S. metro markets. This research was initiated in Q4 2020 and completed in Q2 2021.

“Media coverage of review fraud has been growing, but nobody has quantified the problem,” said Greg Sterling, VP of Market Insights at Uberall, in a news release. “We wanted to understand how big a problem review fraud is today and where it’s concentrated.”

Two-thirds of consumers say fake reviews a growing problem—what can your brand do?

“Unfortunately, a lot of consumers take reviews at face value, and are being deceived,” said Curtis Boyd, founder and CEO of the Transparency Company, in the release. “Google Removed 130 million fake reviews in 2019 and 2020; it’s a multibillion-dollar problem.”

Two-thirds of consumers say fake reviews a growing problem—what can your brand do?

Additional findings from the report include:

  • Google is the top local business reviews site in the U.S., used by ~70 percent of consumers.
  • Of the four platforms examined, Google had the highest average percentage of inauthentic reviews across business categories (10.7 percent). Next in descending order were Yelp (7.1 percent), Tripadvisor (5.2 percent) and Facebook (4.9 percent).
  • The category with the highest fake reviews percentage is Locksmiths (14.5 percent). Pharmacies had the lowest rate across the four sites (1.3 percent).
  • The urban area with the highest review fraud percentage is Miami-Ft Lauderdale with 9.7 percent. Boston was the city with the lowest fraud at 3.9 percent of all reviews.

Two-thirds of consumers say fake reviews a growing problem—what can your brand do?

“Reviews have been an invaluable consumer—and business—resource and their integrity should be safeguarded,” said Sterling. “Fake reviews are contributing to a broader crisis of trust online, and the major sites should do much more to address the problem.”

To preserve consumer confidence, the industry needs to take a more systematic approach to policing review fraud:

  • Use available machine learning and AI tools, together with aggressive enforcement, to bring review fraud down to low, single digits;
  • Embrace an approach which is structurally harder to cheat;
  • Continue to make it easy for businesses and consumers to flag suspect reviews;
  • Move toward verification systems that minimize the likelihood that other than the actual customer is writing reviews (e.g., verified purchaser).

None of these are mutually exclusive approaches and should be used in combination with one another.

Two-thirds of consumers say fake reviews a growing problem—what can your brand do?

Learn more about how businesses and consumers can flag and remove fake reviews.

Download the full report here.

Richard Carufel
Richard Carufel is editor of Bulldog Reporter and the Daily ’Dog, one of the web’s leading sources of PR and marketing communications news and opinions. He has been reporting on the PR and communications industry for over 17 years, and has interviewed hundreds of journalists and PR industry leaders. Reach him at richard.carufel@bulldogreporter.com; @BulldogReporter

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