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Tag: Yelp

  • Groupon Deals Could Hurt the Reputation of Your Business

    The type of headline we ran here probably isn’t exactly the kind of thing Groupon wants to see circulating throughout the Blogosphere these days, considering all the negative press the company has been getting lately, but it is a conclusion drawn from some new academic research.

    That research, from computer scientists John W. Byers and Georgios Zervas of Boston University and Michael Mitzenmacher of Harvard, finds that ratings scores on Yelp for businesses running daily deals are 10% lower on average.

    Is it worth it to your business to run a Groupon? Let us know.

    It’s certainly worth noting that the researchers studied both Groupon and Living Social, which are the two biggest players in the deals space, with Groupon still in the lead (though the gap seems to be narrowing).

    “A key selling point of a daily deals site is the promise of beneficial long-term effects for merchants participating in a deal offering,” the report says. “Since discounted deals typically result in a net short-term loss to the merchant as customers redeem the coupons, a merchant is pitched on the expectation that some new customers, initially attracted by the deal, will become repeat customers, providing a long-term gain. Participating merchants should determine that these gains outweigh the costs, which include providing discounts to their existing customer base.”

    “We find that the average percentage increase in reviews across all merchants who had received at least one review in the 3 months prior to the Groupon offer is 44%,” it says. “Meanwhile, the average month-over-month growth in number of reviews for deals prior to their Groupon offers is about 5%. Similarly, the average percentage increase in reviews the month after the Groupon offer is 84%. Roughly 20% of merchants in our dataset (461 out of 2,332) had received zero reviews in the 3 months prior to the Groupon offer. Of these, 270 received at least one review within two months after the Groupon offer.”

    Yelp Ratings
    The researchers also conclude that “Yelp star ratings decline after a Groupon deal.”

    “The average drop in ratings is 0.12. This could affect any sorted order produced according to Yelp rankings significantly,” the report says. “Also, Yelp scores are reported and displayed according to discretized half-star increments. Thus, an average drop of 0.12 suggests a significant number of merchants may lose a half-star due to rounding. This could have a potentially important effect on a business; a recent study reports that for independent restaurants a one-star increase in Yelp ratings leads to a 9% increase in revenue. However, the transitory nature of Groupon-driven reviews, in addition to complexities of modeling hidden factors like weighted moving averages, cloud our ability to pinpoint the repetitional ramifications precisely.”

    That study by Michael Luca says that its findings suggest that “online consumer reviews substitute for more traditional forms of reputation,” that “consumers do not use all available information and are more responsive to quality changes that are more visible and consumers respond more strongly when a rating contains more information.”

    The new study also looked at text, and found that reviews mentioning either “Groupon” or “Coupon” are associated with star ratings that are 10% lower on average than reviews that don’t use these words. The few reviews that used both words were actually 20% lower on average, according to the report.

    One of the other findings from the study was that Groupon and deals sites in general are greatly helped by word of mouth (like Facebook “likes”). Kind of a no-brainer, but they have data to back it up. There is much more data to back all of these findings up. Detailed methodology can be found throughout the report, which you can read in its entirety here.

    While the findings may turn some businesses off of the Groupon strategy, the news isn’t all bad for Groupon these days. Another report released by Yipit finds that Groupon’s revenue increased by 13% in August, while it gained 2% market share.

    Groupon Revenue on the rise

    Key findings from Yipit’s report include:

    • Groupon’s revenue increased 13% from July to $121 million, a $1.5 billion annual run rate.
    • LivingSocial’s revenue declined 3% to $45 million, a $540 million annual run rate. August was the second consecutive month that LivingSocial experienced declining revenue in North America.
    • The North American Daily Deal industry resumed growth in August. Industry revenue and number of deals offered increased 9% from July.
    • Groupon gained market share at the expense of LivingSocial for the second consecutive month. Prior to July, LivingSocial had been gaining market share on Groupon for several months.
    • In its first full month, Groupon Getaways outperformed LivingSocial Escapes in the travel deals segment. Groupon Getaways generated 42% more revenue than LivingSocial Escapes and averaged 78% higher revenue per deal.

    This comes after a recent report from Experian Hitwise indicating that Groupon’s traffic was down 50% over the summer while LivingSocial’s was up 27%.

    Groupon is now testing e-commerce deals in the UK. This could provide a whole new set of opportunities for business. For brick and mortars, it could lead to more online sales. For strictly online businesses, it could simply let them into the club. Getting repeat business from a consumer might be easier to achieve online. If you’re a click away, as opposed to a drive away, a customer might be more inclined to come back, given the right customer experience. ”

    It remains to be seen if the e-commerce deals will become a mainstream feature across Groupon’s markets, but it’s definitely something to watch for.

    Do you think the benefits outweigh the negatives for businesses offering deals through Groupon or similar services? Tell us what you think.

  • The Decline of Yelp Deals

    As discussed in a previous article, Yelp is cutting back on its Deals positions, which is interesting considering that it comes at a time when Facebook is pulling the plug on its deals product (though it will still have check-in deals).

    This all appears to be happening at a good time for Groupon, as its traffic has been down, according to Hitwise.

    Yelp reportedly cut half of its deals staff (15 positions) after launching Yelp Deals just last year. Yipit is sharing some data about the performance of the service, which lends a little more context to Yelp’s decision.

    “While Yelp’s daily deal segment got off to a strong start, things have been getting worse ever since. But, in August, things got dramatically worse as revenue declined 52%,” Yipit’s Vinicius Vacanti says.

    “Over the last 6 months, Yelp has been generating less and less revenue per deal as competition in the space heated up,” Vacanti adds. “In February, they were generating $19K of revenue per deal. By May, they were down to $7K of revenue per deal.”

    Yipit looks at Yelp Deals

    Yipit looks at Yelp Deals

    Yipit looks at Yelp Deals

    For more analysis on the state of the Deals space, read our interview with Yuupon CEO Mary Song here.

  • Yelp Cuts Back On Daily Deals, Great Timing for Groupon

    It’s an interesting time for the daily deals space. As previously reported, Facebook, which may assumed would be a major player, has decided to fold its deals product, though the company is keeping around check-in deals.

    Yelp, another popular service is also scaling back in the deals department. It has been reported that Yelp cut half of its Deals staff this week, after launching Yelp Deals last year. It’s not pulling the plug on Deals entirely, but the company has cut a reported 15 positions related to Deals.

    Google is still expected to be a major player in the space, especially now that it has Google+ to help it (as if it needed that, given all of its other products), but Google Offers has yet to launch in too many markets.

    Experian Hitwise reported this week that Groupon’s traffic this summer has been down by 50%, while its main rival LivingSocial’s traffic has gone up by 27%. Perhaps a little less focus on deals from competitors is exactly what Groupon needs right now in the road up to its IPO.

    Kara Swisher has an interesting piece talking about employee morale being low at Groupon, thanks to negative press the company has been getting. She reports:

    “It’s made it very difficult for those working at Groupon,” said one source. “But, worse, is how much our reputation is getting burned in the eyes of young engineers we need to recruit.”

    What management at the company does not seem to be as worried about, said sources, is investor disinterest when it comes time to hawk and price the public offering.

    Morale from CEO Andrew Mason doesn’t seem that it has been so bad, however. In a leaked memo (also originally obtained by Swisher), Mason told employees, “…the degree to which we’re getting the shit kicked out of us in the press had finally crossed the threshold from “annoying” to “hilarious.” Second, I was struck by the irony — I had just finished a board meeting last Wednesday saying this to myself: I’ve never been more confident and excited about the future of our business.”

    Groupon has been an inspirational business to say the least. The company has inspired countless knock-offs, copycats, and other somewhat original ideas based on the daily deals concept – from niche versions to aggregation sites, and of course entries into the market from Internet giants.

    It’s going to be very interesting to see how the market treats Groupon as public company, but also how the competition holds up.

  • Yelp Launches App for iPad

    Yelp has launched a long-awaited (by iPad users) iPad app. It’s now available in the iTunes Store. 

    The app lets users do the following:

    – Search for businesses using a new landscape map/list mode, or flip your iPad into portrait for a full screen view

    – Browse business information and reviews

    – Write Yelp reviews and share to Twitter and/or Facebook

    – Bookmark businesses you want to try or have been meaning to review

    – Sign up for a Yelp Account

    – Access new photo search results

    Yelp Comes to the iPad

    "Think of all the local businesses you can search for and bookmark via your Yelp iPad app and cross those pesky last minute gifts off your list — not to mention find bars, movie theaters and more around you to avoid the in-laws," says Yelp’s mobile team. 

    "And while we’ve been up to a ton this year, like always, we plan to update Yelp for iPad in 2011 with even more features like user profiles, complimenting and more," the team adds. 

    Yelp also has apps for BlackBerry, iPhone, Android, and Palm Pre, in addition to a mobile site a m.yelp.com.

  • Businesses Can Offer Customers Deals for Checking In with Yelp

    Yelp has announced check-in offers for businesses, meaning that businesses can offer Yelp users special deals for checking in at their place of business. Check-ins are tied to Twitter and Faecbook (for Android and iPhone users), so when a user checks in, they are potentially sharing it with a lot of their friends. 

    The feature is part of the business owner dashboard on Yelp, and the company says it gives businesses a measurable way to reward their loyal customers while attracting new ones. 

    "What happens when a consumer unlocks your offer? If a consumer chooses the ‘Use it Now!’ option for his Check-in Offer on that visit, it will disappear automatically from his device in a few hours time," the company explains. "The user or the business owner can also tap a button on the phone to mark the offer as used, expiring the timer immediately."

    "If a consumer chooses to ‘Save it!’, that Check-in Offer will be saved several places on their device: the ‘About Me’ page; at the top of the business page where they earned that offer and on the Check-ins tab on the Yelp app," the company adds. "The user can then redeem the offer anytime, following the same process above."

    Businesses Are Key to Making Check-in Apps Mainstream

    Yelp’s offering is just the latest example of how businesses are able to take advantage of users checking into places using mobile apps. While adoption of check-in apps is far from reaching true mass appeal, it is services like this that are bound to nudge the whole phenomenon in that direction. 

    When businesses are able to offer users rewards, users have a reason to check-in. They’re not just doing it for the "fun" of it. If consumers start to realize that they can get good deals and save money, we’re bound to see this become more and more mainstream. 

    What will be interesting to keep an eye on is which services consumers prefer the most, and that could end up being largely dictated by which ones businesses choose to promote thier offers with. Yelp has a good advantage for that reason, given that many businesses owners are already familiar with Yelp in general. Facebook also has a clear advantage because not only do most businesses have some kind of Facebook presence already, but the social network has half a billion users. 

    Currently, Foursquare is still largely considered the poster-child of check-in apps, and CEO Dennis Crowley recently said at ad:tech New York, he’s very "bullish" on where his service is going to go for local merchants. 

    If you’re interested in utilizing Yelp’s new check-in offers features, I suggest reading their how-to guide. The feature is available in the US, Canada, UK, and Ireland. Plumbers, limo drivers, locksmiths, and other "on-the-go" businesses are restricted from using the feature.

    Related:

    Check-in Apps Add Key Relevancy Factor to Your Marketing

    Thinking of Check-Ins As Searches That Aren’t Going to Google

  • Yelp Launches Windows Phone 7 App

    Now that Windows Phone 7 devices are available in the U.S. we can expect that apps to start flooding in. Yelp announced its new Windows Phone 7 app today, available in Europe and the U.S. 

    The app lets users use location-aware technology to find restaurants, shops, bars, etc. and read reviews for businesses, browse photos, map business locations, and get directions. 

    "It’s no secret that mobile has been a huge focus for us this year," says Eric Singley, Yelp’s Director of Consumer and Mobile Products. "With over 2.6 million users in the past month, we’ve been developing like crazy on our iPhone and Android applications, and working hard to bring goodies to our other platforms." 

    Yelp Windows Phone 7 App

    "Couple that with our focus on rolling out Yelp in new countries and today you have an app made in heaven: the 6th member of the Yelp Mobile family, Windows Phone 7!" adds Singley. 

    As of mid-September, Yelp had over 13 million reviews. Businesses are going to want to pay a significant amount of attention to the conversation around their brand on Yelp. Clearly, the already-popular site is continuing to expand (despite its rocky relationship with Google Places). 

    Yelp says it will have more features available for Windows Phone app soon. 

    What apps do you want to see for Windows Phone 7? Tell us in the comments.

  • What’s Going on in Search and eBusiness

    At SMX East in New York, Bing announced new Webmaster Tools features including a link report. Google also added percent change data to its own Webmaster Tools query reports. More on these here.

    Search Engine Land’s Matt McGee liveblogged a keynote with Yelp COO Geoff Donaker, who shared some interesting stats about Yelp. He says they got about 38 million unique visitors last month on the web site, they have about 13 million reviews, and they have about three million users per month using Yelp apps. He also commented on Yelp’s algorithm, saying, on a business page, recency is one of the primary factors. To quote Matt’s notes, "They want the most recent, trusted reviews showing up top."

    As you may know WebProNews attends a fair amount of industry events to cover in both video and article format. While, we can’t make it to all of them (we couldn’t make it to SMX this time), that doesn’t mean we ignore all the ones we don’t attend. 

    We have a new Events page available here (you will also see an Events tab at the top of  WPN that goes there). This page shows upcoming industry events that we’re keeping our eye on, and which ones we’re actually attending. 

    WebProNews reporter Abby Johnson also keeps a blog on the page. As time goes on, she will offer insights beyond her video interviews as she attends various events. 

    WebProNews Events

    The Inbound Marketing Summit starts tomorrow in Boston. WebProNews is a media partner of this event and WPN’s Mike McDonald will be reporting. Then late next week, Abby and WPN’s Chris Crum (and the rest of our video crew) will be heading to Vegas for BlogWorld (where WPN is an official video provider). Shortly after that, WPN’s Mike Sachoff will be hitting Search Engine Strategies Chicago

    Check back often to see what events are on our radar, and stay tuned to WebProNews and WebProNews Videos for coverage. 

  • Yelp Beats “Deceptive Acts” Claims

    Yelp recently won a case against a dentist who tried who sued the site over a negative review, claiming defamation and "deceptive acts and practices" under New York state law.

    The defamation part was pretty much old hat. This is not the first time someone has tried to sue the owners of a site (or even Yelp specifically) because they didn’t like a review. The second part was new to the story, though the court still moved to dismiss it. Technology and intellectual property attorney Evan Brown writes on his Internet Cases blog

    The other claim against Yelp — for deceptive acts and practices — was intriguing, though the court did not let it stand. Plaintiff alleged that Yelp’s Business Owner’s Guide says that once a business signs up for advertising with Yelp, an “entirely automated” system screens out reviews that are written by less established users.

    The problem with this, plaintiff claimed, was that the process was not automated with the help of algorithms, but was done by humans at Yelp. That divergence between what the Business Owner’s Guide said and Yelps actual practices, plaintiff claimed, was consumer-oriented conduct that was materially misleading, in violation of New York’s General Business Law Section 349(a). 

    In the end, the court decided that statements from Yelp’s Business Owner’s Guide were not consumer-oriented, so that was the end of it. 

    Eric Goldman, an Associate Professor of Law at Santa Clara University School of Law, writes on his Technology and Marketing Law Blog: "While Yelp avoided liability in this lawsuit, it should scrub its site to ensure it does not claim that Yelp’s reviews are bias-free or the sole product of automated algorithms. For example, the complaint alleges that Yelp’s guide says ‘We remove the guesswork by screening out reviews that are written by less established users. The process is entirely automated to avoid human bias.’ Obviously, the second half of the statement contains a fatal logic flaw; any algorithm intrinsically reflects human biases in its configurations."

    Do you think the court was right to side with Yelp? Tell us what you think.

    Yesterday, Yelp announced that it surpassed 13 million reviews. Yelp reviews were recently removed from Google Place Pages, instantly giving them less visibility. 

    Hat tips to Greg Sterling and Mike Masnick.

  • Yelp Surpasses 13 Million Reviews

    Yelp Surpasses 13 Million Reviews

    Yelp announced that it has surpassed 13 million reviews. I wonder how many of them are positive.  In a post on the company blog, CEO Jeremy Stoppelman writes:

    Last week, Yelp passed the 13 million review mark — and it’s no secret that because our community is sharing all these great reviews, that Yelp has become the best place to find a local business. But did you know that Yelp is also a resource to help you find “dog-friendly” B&Bs, campgrounds with the “best view,” even beaches that have “great waves”?

    Because we have millions of reviews and counting, that means we have a massive wealth of content that can provide a rich snapshot of, well, anything. Not just businesses. For example, if you do a search for “best views” in San Francisco, guess what comes up? Reviews for Land’s End Park, Corona Heights Park, California Coastal Trail and much more.

    Yelp hits 13 million reviews

    Yelp may miss a great amount of exposure going forward, however. Google has apparently stopped showing Yelp results on its Place Pages. 

    The two companies had something of a beef over Google showing Yelp content on these pages in the past. The two companies discussed this publicly at a TechCrunch event. 

    It was never quite clear to me why Yelp would rather not have that search visibility, while their competitors reap the benefits of their absence, but the company apparently got what it wanted. It will be interesting to see if the next 13 million reviews come as quickly as the last.

  • Yelp Wins: Less Search Visibility

    It looks like Yelp may have gotten its wish – for Google not to use its data for Place Pages. It is still unclear to me how less search engine visibility is a good thing, but, Google Place Pages appear to have eliminated Yelp.

    This was first spotted by TechCrunch, and is as of yet unconfirmed, but doing various searches (including one I did for a previous article on the subject, which used to return Yelp content), Yelp content appears to be gone from Place Pages.

    Now Yelp gets less exposure from Google, which dominates the search market. Even in Google’s organic listings, Place Pages are getting a great deal of prominence. In this query, I couldn’t even find a Yelp result without scrolling down. Meanwhile, the Place Page sits right at the top with a big image and other formatted text to draw attention to it:

    Durango's Search - Yelp Not Near the top, Place Pages are

    Earlier this month, Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman and Google VP of Product Management John Hanke shared a stage at TechCrunch’s Social Currency CrunchUp. Stoppelman expressed Yelp’s disdain for the situation, while Hanke explained that Google aims to serve the best content to its users.

    The situation could be compared to the Google News debate that has been going on for years. It’s simply a case of Google providing links and snippets for a site.

    Now Google users can get more exposure (and links) to Yelp competitors like Urbanspoon, Citysearch, Yahoo Local, and others. What a win for Yelp.

    Do a lot of people use Yelp? Sure. As many as Google? I don’t think so. I have to wonder how many Yelp users have traditionally gotten there through Google. With less prominence in Google, I suspect less people will go to Yelp.

  • Twitter Lures Sales Execs Away From Facebook, Yelp

    Whatever company handles Twitter’s business cards should soon be tasked with printing a lot more batches.  Twitter’s hired two people away from Facebook and Yelp, and these individuals will act as sales execs, establishing teams and presumably "meeting and greeting" lots of potential advertisers.

    Dan Coughlin, who spent more than a couple years at Facebook, will be responsible for handling the east half of the U.S., and Amanda Levy, who was Yelp’s first salesperson, will take care of the west.  Both will then report to Twitter COO Dick Costolo, according to Michael Learmonth.

    Otherwise, Learmonth reported, "Both will be charged with building out a team to move what Twitter is calling its Promoted Suite, or Twitter ads that today consist of promoted tweets and promoted trends."

    The execs are sure to handle other advertising concepts, too, as soon as Twitter conceives and/or unveils them.

    Twitter LogoIt’s significant that Twitter was able to lure Coughlin and Levy away from their old employers, in any event.  Yelp’s sales department has perhaps had to endure some negative PR in recent months, but Levy predates that mess, and Facebook isn’t exactly a dying company.

    It should be interesting to see what Coughlin and Levy can achieve as they settle into their roles and expand their teams.

  • When Did Search Engine Visibility Become a Bad Thing?

    Google and Yelp have had some issues for sometime, following a failed acquisition attempt, but it’s rare that the tensions between the two companies are aired for an audience. That is just what happened at TechCrunch’s Social Currency Crunchup event.

    Would you be happy with the level of Google visiblity Yelp gets? Let us know.

    Yelp CEO Jeremy Stoppelman and Google VP of Product Management John Hanke shared a stage and talked a bit about their situation. TechCrunch’s MG Siegler shares his account of the experience here. Essentially, what it boils down to is that Yelp isn’t thrilled with Google showing its content on Google Places, which the company is heavily pushing these days. Yelp accounts for a significant amount of the information Google shows on its Place pages. Siegler writes:

    Yelp can’t like that too much. In fact, we’ve heard they’re particularly unhappy because they used to have a deal with Google for this data, but they pulled out of that deal a couple years ago. But Google decided to use Yelp’s data anyway simply by crawling it. Yelp can’t stop them from doing that unless they want to delist themselves from Google — a move which could kill them.

    In my experience, Google Place Pages do offer a lot of Yelp content, but they also offer reviews from other sources like Urbanspoon, Citysearch, etc. Furthermore, they link to the content. If a user wants to see the full Yelp content for that listing, they have to clickthrough to Yelp.

    Google Place Pages showing Yelp listings

    This appears to be just another version of the ongoing Google News/aggregation argument. People that may have gone to Yelp before, may go to Google Place Pages and see a wider variety of review content, but Google Place Pages might also send more people to Yelp that otherwise would not have gone. Not everyone is a Yelp user. Google has a LOT of users, many of which search for local businesses all of the time.

    Yelp has a solid selection of mobile offerings, including apps for BlackBerry, iPhone, Android, and Palm Pre, as well as the Yelp mobile site at m.yelp.com. Yelp should focus on improving its own service and promoting those improvements as well as the use of its mobile apps. If Yelp wants consumers to go to Yelp before Google, they need to convince people to get their mobile apps on their home screens.

    As for the non-mobile web, perhaps Yelp should focus on a similar strategy through social media, browser plug-ins, etc. (not that they’re not doing this). They need to convince people that they should be the go-to place.  So far, Yelp has done a pretty good job. It’s got a solid user base and brand recognition. It seems to me that Google exposure would only add to this, and should be embraced. Yelp is in the top ten organic listings on Google for almost every local review query I enter. They’re doing something right.

    Google has always maintained its goal is to show users the best content, and Yelp should feel privileged that it is held in that regard. That could change. The space Yelp operates in will only get more crowded with mobile apps, especially with the whole check-in app boom (which Google is also placing more focus on , I might add).  A lot of content providers (and Yelp competitors) would probably kill to get the Google exposure they do.

    Local Businesses Pay Attention

    It’s important for businesses to understand that Google Places is making it harder to hide from a bad reputation. Place Pages are bringing in reviews from Yelp and a variety of other places, and keeping putting them in the spotlight. Keep an eye on them.

    Place Pages offer some pretty useful tools for businesses, and Google is continuously making changes. For example, earlier this year, Google let businesses start instantly posting data to their pages, allowing for the addition of updates, coupons, announcements, etc. This can be incredibly useful for attracting customers based on timely deals (especially in the age of Groupon).

    Tag Advertising is another example. This lets businesses pay to use tags to highlight their listings on Google Maps. They also offer customized QR Codes.

    It’s also important for businesses to take note of the increased focus Google is putting on Place Pages. The newest version of Google Maps for Android lets people put a Places icon right on their home screen (separate from the regular Google Maps icon), for all intents and purposes, turning Places into its own app (another reason why Yelp needs to focus on selling its mobile apps to consumers). Android sales have been skyrocketing, by the way.

    How important do you consider Google Places to your business? Comment here.

  • Yelp Facebook Implementation Exposes Security Concerns

    If privacy concerns weren’t enough to get people thinking about deleting their Facebook accounts, they also have security concerns to consider. As Facebook takes over the web, user information goes with it. One can only imagine the potential threats that are lurking around the corner.

    An exploit was discovered on Yelp, one of Facebook’s preliminary partners for its Open Graph initiative, which would have allowed malicious sites to harvest user names, email, and data users shared publicly on Facebook, as Jason Kincaid explains. Users wouldn’t have even had to do anything at Yelp beyond visiting the site.

    Yelp Facebook Implementation - Are there greater security issues?

    Luckily the exploit has been patched, but as the Open Graph expands, one can’t help but wonder how often these things will happen. Facebook and security issues are not exactly strangers, and cybercriminals will go anywhere they can, and they’re getting more advanced all the time.

    As e-commerce gets bigger on Facebook, consumers may find such scares a little unsettling when faced with the option of using their Facebook account to pay for items. Facebook is actually expanding its Offers program now, which lets users earn Credits by shopping.

    While there does seem to be a trend lately of people talking about deleting their Facebook profiles, it doesn’t appear that the masses are jumping on board, because there are just too many reasons to stay. For most users, the pros outweigh the cons, and that’s just how Facebook needs it. As Nicholas Carlson notes, users were more concerned about Facebook’s news feed redesign and Beacon, but they still stayed through those.

  • Yelp To Display Filtered Reviews

    Yelp To Display Filtered Reviews

    Local business review site Yelp said today it is taking steps to increase transparency about how user reviews are presented to consumers.

    The move comes amid at least three lawsuits alleging that Yelp manipulates reviews based on whether a company advertises with the site.

    Beginning today, anyone who wants to see which reviews have been identified by Yelp’s automated review filter will be able to do so via a link to a separate page containing that content. The company is also dropping its "Favorite Review" feature that has been part of its advertising for the past four years.

    Jeremy-Stoppleman-Yelp "Today we’ve taken steps to make it even more clear that Yelp treats review content equally for advertisers and non-advertisers alike and that there is no relationship between advertising and a business’ reviews on Yelp," said Jeremy Stoppelman, Yelp’s chief executive officer and co-founder. 

    "While Yelp is helping millions of consumers find millions of great local businesses each month — and consumer traffic and business advertisers continue to reach new highs — myths have persisted about how review content is displayed on Yelp."

    Yelp said the removal of its "Favorite Review" feature will make it more clear that reviews on the site are separate from advertising. Instead advertisers will be able to post a video to their Yelp pages.

    The company said it will continue to work on ways to combat fake or malicious reviews and will continue to develop the review filter to keep ahead of spammers.
     

  • Yelp Adds ‘Check-Ins’ To Reviews

    Yelp Adds ‘Check-Ins’ To Reviews

    The review site Yelp has been interesting to watch over time. It gets a lot of interest from different businesses like Google who was interested buying it. Then it gets more investment from VC’s when those deals don’t pan out. It has been vilified for business practices and then has worked to make the service more ‘balanced’ as well. Regardless of your point of view of the service it certainly has established itself as the leader in the small business online review space. This month’s Inc. magazine’s cover story is on the service (take note of the what not to do story that opens the piece ….. creepy.)

    Now Yelp is looking to make the service even more interesting by adding a location based feature that allows reviewers to show how many times they have “checked in” to a location that they have reviewed. Mashable tells us more

    Last week, the battle for your check-ins took an interesting new turn as Yelp rolled out a set of location features for its iPhone app. Today, Yelp’s expanding the feature to include check-in information alongside user reviews on its website.

    With that small step, you can see exactly why check-ins are such a big deal for Yelp and a big threat to upstarts like Foursquare and Gowalla. We’re told that Yelp just passed nine million reviews, and now, with the ability to connect check-in data to individual reviews, the company is hoping to add further credibility to its users’ ratings.

    According to the article this feature is only available for iPhone apps but versions for Android, BlackBerry and the like are on the horizon. Here’s a look at how these check-in appear in a review.

    They also show up in a user’s profile by their reviews. This is important because it gives some level of participation to the site by giving users the ability to add more depth and credibility to their reviews if they have repeatedly “checked in” from that location.

    Mashable’s Adam Ostrow makes an interesting observation about this feature as it relates to the level of competition this service could provide to a much smaller high flyer of late, Foursquare, which is a location based ‘game’.

    ……..the most interesting aspect of Foursquare is not the game, but seeing where your friends are, and Yelp’s doing that too. Given Yelp has a big headstart, it’s hard not to see it representing a big threat to the startups — though Facebook and its expected location features still loom large as well.

    I am not a participant in any of these location-based activities personally. There are a lot of reasons for it and I explain a few here. Whether I use it or not though is obviously not the point. There appears to be a real growing wave of moving toward filling this apparent obsession of knowing where everyone is at all times and letting them know where you are. It’s like a location tweet of sorts.

    As marketers, there could be tremendous value that will be discovered with time. Who will be the players that really take advantage of it and allow themselves to ‘stub their toes’ early on in the ‘monetization of location’ game should be fun to watch.

    Are you seeing any real effective early adopters marketers who leverage location based services out there? Do tell.

    Comments

  • Yahoo Possibly Interested In Yelp

    Yahoo Possibly Interested In Yelp

    Fair warning: this is not a report upon which you should rearrange your stock portfolio.  Please don’t even bet anyone a significant amount of money.  Just the same, Carol Bartz appears to have given a hint that she’s interested in acquiring Yelp.

    Carol BartzBrian Womack recently interviewed Bartz, and at one point, asked her about buying the site known for its fast-growing collection of local reviews.  Bartz, who is in turn known for speaking plainly, didn’t give a "yes" or "no" (or "heck yes" or "heck no") answer.

    Instead, Yahoo’s CEO said, "Local is extremely important.  People do some outrageous percentage of their commercial spending five miles from their home."  Which kind of sounds like "that’s a good idea."

    Of course, even if Bartz had answered in the affirmative, the odds don’t favor anything happening.  Late last year, the rumor mill indicated that Google trying to acquire Yelp, and if Google’s popularity and deeper pockets couldn’t secure a deal, it’s hard to imagine Yahoo succeeding.

    So again, this isn’t a concrete, "Yahoo will acquire Yelp" announcement so much as an exercise in parsing CEO’s sentences.  Hat tip goes to Jay Yarow.

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