Hallmarks of paid review spam networks attacking a business include:
Profiles which have left only one or two reviews.
Profiles which have left multiple reviews in the same region for the same business type. For example, a profile which has left seven reviews of local sporting goods stores in San Diego, all of them negative except for one glowing review for one entity which may be paying them.
Profiles with reviews of businesses across a country or around the world, all left within a short time period. For example, a single reviewer claiming to have seen a dentist in seven different countries over the course of three days.
If you suspect that the business has been targeted with a fake negative review meeting the above criteria, it’s time to act. Head down this byway forewarned that, despite all of your efforts to get a spam review removed, the platform may not act. But make your best effort, regardless.
Here are your options for taking action on some of the major review platforms:
Google
Log into the company’s Google Business Profile dashboard, click on the “Reviews” link in the left menu, find the fake review, and click the three dots to the right of it to choose the “flag as inappropriate” options. Wait at least three days and then check to see if the review is gone. If not, you can try to report the problem via this live chat form.
If all else fails and you feel you’ve stumbled across a large-scale review spam network, getting attention from the media has prompted Google to take action in the past. If even publicity fails to protect a business from large-scale review spam, litigation may need to be pursued as a last resort.
Yelp
Yelp offers these guidelines for reporting reviews, and also advises owners to respond to reviews that violate guidelines. Yelp takes review quality seriously and has set high standards other platforms might do well to follow, in terms of catching spammers and warning the public against bad actors.
Facebook
Here are Facebook’s instructions for reporting reviews that fail to meet community standards. Note that you can only report reviews with text — you can’t report solo ratings. Interestingly, you can turn off reviews on Facebook, but to do so out of fear would be to forego the considerable benefits they can provide.
Yellow Pages and TripAdvisor
In 2016, YP.com began showing TripAdvisor reviews alongside internal reviews. If review spam stems from a YP review, click the “Flag” link in the lower right corner of the review and fill out the form to report your reasons for flagging. If the review spam stems from TripAdvisor, you’ll need to deal with them directly and read their extensive guidelines.
TripAdvisor states that they screen reviews for quality purposes, but that fake reviews can slip through. If you’re the owner, you can report fraudulent reviews from the Management Center of your TripAdvisor dashboard. Click the “concerned about a review” link and fill out the form. If you’re simply a member of the public, you’ll need to sign into TripAdvisor and click the flag link next to the review to report a concern.
CitySearch
To report a fake review on CitySearch, email customerservice@citygrid.com. In your email, link to the business that has received the spam review, include the date of the review and the name of the reviewer and then cite the guidelines you feel the review violates.
Foursquare
Foursquare is a bit different in the language they use to describe tips/reviews. They offer these suggestions for reporting abusive tips.
*If you need to find the guidelines and reporting options for an industry-specific review platform like FindLaw or HealthGrades, Phil Rozek’s big list will be a good starting point for further research.
Summing up, smart brands adhere to guidelines, commit to a plan for monitoring and analysis of incoming reviews, and make any necessary investments in spam fighting. A lack of any of these elements can stand in the way of meeting goals. But there’s one more mountain to climb on this journey, as it directly relates to reputation and success: customer-brand affinity.