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A U.K. Regulatory Board Is Forcing TripAdvisor to Change its Advertising
It's fascinating to compare the different ways in which TripAdvisor is regarded by (a) the press and the regulators of Britain, and (b) the press and the regulators of the United States. Here in America, no one seriously challenges the claims of TripAdvisor to provide accurate reflections of hotels and resorts. Over there in Great Britain, the opposite is the case. Last week, the Advertising Standard Authority of Great Britain issued an extraordinary ruling that TripAdvisor can no longer claim that all of its reviews are "honest, real or trusted" or that all its reviews are by "real travellers." The ASA has demanded that TripAdvisor make big changes to its advertising.
 
Side by side with the regulators, the British press keeps up a steady drum-beat of vehement exposés of reviews appearing in TripAdvisor. This week, the Telegraph has printed a long critique, pointing out that TripAdvisor's reviews can frequently combine, in the same review, both a five-star rave about a particular hotel with a statement that the same hotel "is the worst in the world".
 
"The time has come," the British newspaper continues, "for a re-think on how they [TripAdvisor] verify their reviews. At the very least, anyone that wants to leave a review must prove that they have stayed or eaten at the given hotel or restaurant. All the ASA ruling has done is highlight the need for such a change."
 
Meantime, the Irish Times of Dublin has printed an even more damning indictment. It tells how an employee at the Carlton Hotel Group of Ireland  e-mailed dozens of its employees, asking them to take photos of various rooms to be inserted into fake reviews submitted to TripAdvisor. That way, a mass of favorable reviews would appear in each of the write-ups of the chain's hotels. Employees were cautioned to use crude cellphone cameras for taking the shots, and to send in the reviews on computers that had no association with the hotels or the group. (When Carlton's lawyers heard of these instructions, they apparently forced a withdrawal of the pronouncement.)
 
To all these reports, TripAdvisor has responded with sanctimonious claims of the extreme measures they allegedly take to weed out phony comments from their website, comments either pro or con. No convincing proof is offered of their ability to spot these invented claims. But they apparently continue to oppose any demand that they require their reviewers to show proof that they have actually stayed as guests at the hotels in question, and such a procedure is the only one that could cut down drastically on false raves or critiques.
 
I have earlier written of my own inability to make heads or tails out of various TripAdvisor reviews that I have read. How do you reach a judgment about a hotel if ten people call it a sheer wonder and ten other people call it a fleabag? Even when such contrasts are absent from a particular review, how wise is it to rely on the judgment of a sheer amateur who has been, once in their lives, in a particular hotel--and has been to no other nearby hotels?
 
I will continue to seek out the appraisals of experienced critics who have a reputation for the worth of their opinions.
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GarryRF wrote:
I must admit that when I'm on Vacation - usually All Inclusive for 2 weeks - then there are some people I try to avoid. Moan, moan, moan. Usually about the Hotel Restaurant and Bar service. Most folks avoid them. Then - a week after you arrive home - you see the bad report on Trip Advisor. "Staff all Grumpy". No... Look in the Mirror !!
Garry
2/3/2012 4:17 PM EST
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78goldwing wrote:
I've used TA for years & have never had issues with the reviews. Of course, I don't look for 50/50 splits. I look for ones that are overwhelming positive with many reviews.
2/3/2012 5:45 PM EST
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darngooddigs wrote:
We often use TripAdvisor - for both planning our own vacations and as a source for doing research on nominations we receive for Darn Good Digs, our accommodations website. The sheer number of reviews on TA is a wealth of information. Unfortunately, not all the reviews are reliable - some because of clear fraud, but more often, simply because the reviewer sees the world very differently from us. Maybe they stayed at a cute little B&B when they should have stayed at the Motel 6. Maybe they hold a grudge - because of a misunderstanding about a bill or a room reservation. I'm glad TripAdvisor exists, but maybe it should be required to have a clear warning label: "Use with caution, all reviews are not reliable."
2/4/2012 9:25 PM EST
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Ramblinman wrote:
I think these regulations are misguided and unnecessary. I've used Trip Adviser for hotels a number of times and have always found it reliable. You need, of course, to weigh the reviews, not just accept them uncritically. Some people, for instance, will give a bad rating for things that are trivial ("The TV only had five channels!") or that I don't care about ("The Health Center was too crowded.") You also need to disregard most reviews by a member who has only published one review -- they may be a shill, or have some weird special grudge. Photos are one thing to pay attention to -- if they say a room was dirty or had broken furniture or a view of an alley, then the picture proving it is persuasive. As for phoney promotional reviews, they are usually laughably obvious, since they read like ad copy: "We had a wonderful stay in this luxurious hotel where the professional staff catered to our every whim ..."
2/5/2012 10:01 AM EST
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grayfox wrote:
Trip Advisor is a wonderful way to get a feel for properties. I have submitted many reviews honestly to my opinion of them and believe most people do.
I can also read between the lines when a person is just mad and resentful because someone rubbed them wrong. Also I read many positives and one that is mad about a hair in the tub in an ordinary room. Just get some tissue and toss it. There is times when I feel a hotel has some imput because the review sounds more like an advertizement.
Over all it is a definitly a must needed website to be used with a little judgement.
Makes me kind of wander who's at the root of such a persuit in GB and their true intent ?????
2/5/2012 12:38 PM EST
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RewardHunter wrote:
As a vacation homeowner with properties on sites like HereStay and HomeAway, i know how frustrating it can be when you find out that your competition is trying to game the system by paying for reviews...I think this is a good idea.
2/6/2012 4:51 AM EST
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kwkiwigirl wrote:
That's ludicrous, tripadvisor is one of the best travel tools around to prevent you from picking out a poor property for your holiday.

You can very quickly see which hotels are getting bogus good reviews done for themselves as the reviewers usually only have 1 review. People who have been posting reviews over the years build up a very credible history with tripadvisor and with the stats facility now you can see if someone is always posting negative or positive reviews.
2/9/2012 2:22 AM EST
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dkeltz wrote:
I give my reviews to Trip Advisor and have come across the good, the bad and the sometimes funny stays in hotels. If you read enough of the posted reviews you get a real sense of what a property is generally like. I think that site is a great travel tool and wouldn't go away without reading the hotel review before booking.
2/15/2012 3:51 PM EST
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Bsorge wrote:
Hogwash! What I see is Frommer trying to protect it British roots. TrIp advisor does have some stupid reviews, but only an idiot won't see through these. meanwhile, unlike Frommer, the reviews can be refuted by the facility that was downgraded. They go out of their way to allow a rebuttal. Shame on Frommer for their professional jealousy.
2/19/2012 8:35 AM EST

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