What do you think about fake Twitter reviews and fake stars on SaaS landing pages?
beni
11 replies
Replies
Lorenz Sell@lorenzsell
Sutra
I always wonder about some of those sites that have a widget showing you "live" sales. And while you're on the site it pops something that says "John in Denver just purchased". It feels so fake. When I see stuff like that it's an instant turn off. When I use a product, one of my most important criteria is integrity. If they don't have integrity in the way they present themselves and try to sell to me, then it's most likely downhill from there.
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Vozo AI
Fake reviews and stars can erode trust and damage a brand's credibility in the long run. Authentic feedback is crucial for building genuine customer relationships and ensuring sustainable growth.
It has become much difficult to trust anything today because of these kind of stuff.
Fake Twitter reviews and stars on SaaS landing pages are like using debug print statements as code documentation - misleading and counterproductive. It's all about authenticity in a world full of copy-paste illusions, right?
It's a shame, for both the company and the customers. The company thinks it will work, but it won't, and customers will signup with expectations that are not met and then churn.
I have even had people reach out for G2 reviews, they wrote the review for me, sent me a title and a day to post. It was very elaborate. They offered to review our product on G2 - we are not on there yet. Naturally I declined.
I will never use a service or product with fake reviews. This is why I left Turing (remote jobs) after passing in all the tests lol
Hey @benithemaker! That's such an interesting topic! 😄 Fake reviews and stars can be really misleading 😕. It definitely undermines trust in the product. I'm curious, what measures do you think can be taken to combat this issue? 🤔
That would definitely make it even worse. At Xspiral, we never ask people to make fake reviews or give false feedback. We currently have zero stars on most SaaS landing pages/dictionaries. We believe that as long as our product is good, we will naturally receive more genuine reviews and feedback over time.
The consensus here is clear: fake reviews undermine trust and damage credibility. Authenticity and transparency are vital to long-term success. I think the real deal is to focus on genuine feedback to build real customer relationships. Fake reviews won't get us far in the game.
Would definitely stay away from them.
You could give a few people a free trial in exchange for a short testimonial/review.
Fake reviews undermine the hard work of honest businesses and can skew market competition unfairly.