As you might imagine one of the top questions we get from prospects, especially branded manufacturers is, “What about negative reviews?”.
We’ve covered the topic on this blog and elsewhere. Over a year ago we discovered the Ratings J-Curve across our clients which still holds true today: 80% of reviews are positive. One of our first branded manufacturers, Burpee, commented that negative reviews actually help conversion. And I’ve written an article explaining other benefits of negative reviews in iMedia.
The topic came up again in a great article from Joan Voight in adweek, titled “Negative Reviews are Really Positive“. The article reports several of our branded clients carrying reviews:
The surveys come as many brands are joining Amazon.com and review sites such as yelp.com, tripadvisor.com and consumersearch.com in offering reviews on their web sites. In May, Toshiba joined Dell and Hewlett Packard in offering online reviews “to enhance the buying experience.” Levi’s will join Fair Indigo and EMS in the apparel space, offering customer reviews by the close of 2007.
Bill Blass, formerly of Sears and Lands’ End wisely explains:
“If all reviews are good, customers question if the ratings are legitimate,” Bill Bass, CEO of Fair Indigo, told Adweek. “Not only will people ignore the reviews, but it will hurt their trust in the brand. It would be better to have no reviews at all.”
And John Lazarchik of PETCO has predicted:
“In two years customer reviews on branded sites will be more common,” said John Lazarchic, Petco’s vice president of e-commerce. “A few years after that if shoppers don’t find reviews on a site, they’ll just go shop somewhere else.”

