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    Negative Reviews Can Be Beneficial and Yes Boost Sales

    A few posts back, I wrote about the importance of online ratings and reviews and directly related it the experience I had over this past summer in selecting my new computer.

    Much of the hesitation for many with diving into social media is the negativity that they associate with social media. “What if someone says something negative about our company, products or services? It could spread like wild fire and do damage in ways that we may never recover from.” As written in the book Groundswell, they are talking about your company, products and services. If they are not speaking directly to you, then you don’t have the opportunity to take control of the situation by answering back and providing solutions to their problems. Ultimately, with open lines of communication, these people will not only continue to be your honored customers, but they’ll spread the word to engage and enlist the new customers you are working so hard to sell.

    CNNMoney.com posts a great article by Jennifer Alsever about the success that can be attained through negative comments that are shared online by your website. The point: negativity turns out to be a gift to your business, your products and to your current and future customers. What are you waiting for? Engage your customers and ask them to rate your products and services and share them with everyone who comes to your website. Everyone wins! And what could be better then boosting sales via happy customers?

    Best Nicole

    (Fortune Small Business) — Like many retailers, Jim Hobart knows the value of a good testimonial.

    The online store he co-founded, AlpacaDirect.com, always offered a page full of cherry-picked customer comments raving about the site’s alpaca sweaters, socks and yarn. But recently Hobart, 47, decided to take the idea a step further: He hired PowerReviews, whose software lets shoppers write their own product reviews directly on the retailer’s Web site.

    It was a risky move for the four-year-old company, based in Brentwood, Calif. Hobart was effectively paying to host bad press — such as posts by customers who described AlpacaDirect’s golf cardigan as “kinda sweaty” and a “poor fit.” Both awarded the cardigan three out of a possible five stars.

    But a month after installing the PowerReviews service, Hobart saw sales climb 23% on items that had customer reviews (even that cardigan, which garnered an average of four stars).

    “People are really researching their purchases,” he says. “We knew our customers liked our products, and we wanted them to tell one another.”

    Online reviews have been spreading ever since Amazon.com (AMZN, Fortune 500) pioneered them in 1997. Witness the rise of “social shopping” Web sites like Kaboodle and ShopWiki and of consumer review sites, including Yelp and Judy’s Book. But today’s customer feedback software is growing more sophisticated, more personal and more affordable for small businesses.

    Consumers are becoming used to searching for reviews when they shop online. Internet shoppers rank reviews as the most desired feature of a Web site, according to a recent survey by Forrester Research. “People want to talk among themselves,” says Jacqueline Anderson, a senior consultant at Forrester.

    Adds Larry Freed, CEO of ForeSee Results, which provides customer satisfaction surveys for Web sites: “If they leave your site to look for reviews, they most likely won’t come back.”

    Finding good review software isn’t easy, as Hobart discovered. He was turned on to the idea in 2006 after offering 2,200 AlpacaDirect products via Amazon, where he noticed that products with customer reviews typically sold better. He investigated free review software but decided not to use the programs because they required extensive customization by an IT professional.

    Hobart was turned away when he first called San Francisco-based PowerReviews in 2007. At the time, PowerReviews focused on the enterprise market, customizing $1,000- to $2,000-a-month review software for larger retailers such as REI and Staples (SPLS, Fortune 500).

    But four months later the company called Hobart back, saying it had changed its mind. A stream of small businesses had been asking for inexpensive, easy-to-install software. “We now think this is a very big market,” says PowerReviews vice president Darby Williams.

    Hobart currently pays $80 a month for PowerReviews Express. The software sends e-mails to customers who have made purchases and invites them to submit reviews. The feedback system includes a text box for comments and the all-important five-star rating system. PowerReviews’ staff members read every review and remove posts they deem obscene or libelous. Otherwise, everything is fair game.

    It’s important that site owners resist the temptation to edit or delete reviews they don’t like. “If everything is positive, that raises a red flag among consumers,” says Forrester’s Anderson. According to market research firm Keller Fay Group, 87% of consumers tend to write reviews when they have positive things to say.

    And even negative reviews can be beneficial. When one customer grumbled that a photo of a yarn spool misrepresented its shade of green, Hobart responded by posting a new photo. He also appended a comment to the negative review saying that the problem had been dealt with.

    Ultimately, says Hobart, reviews retain customers. The vast majority of AlpacaDirect’s customers return, so it’s crucial to snag first-timers. “Reviews help build that initial trust,” he says. “They are key to the long-term success of our company.”

    3 Responses to “Negative Reviews Can Be Beneficial and Yes Boost Sales”

    1. Bodyc says:

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      Bodyc

    2. Edwas says:

      Greatings, Thank you! I would now go on this blog every day!
      Thank you
      Edwas

    3. Edwas says:

      Where are you from? Is it a secret? :)
      Edwas

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