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Ripoffreport.com and your Dealerships Online Reputation

G

Guest Poster

Guest
Guest Posting by Stan Sher

Does your dealer have a complaint on the RipoffReport.com?

Are you monitoring the site to be sure your not listed?
How do you treat your customers?
How did you treat your previous employees?

These are questions that need to be considered when we search for our dealership in Google to monitor our placement. The reason for this is that there are many dealerships that have given previous customers as well as previous employees a very negative experience. These dealerships have rip-off reports filed on ripoffreport.com.  These accusations or statements are easily found on the search engine when you Google the dealership name and are sometimes seen on the first page. As the internet evolves even further, dealership reputation management is becoming more important. There are websites that offer a lot of insight which can be both healthy and/or harmful to your dealership’s reputation.

Ripoffreport.com is a website that was created to help consumers to take negative shots at businesses which accordingly did not practice proper business methods when handling these customers. In addition, there are negative reports by some previous employees of some of the companies that can be found on there as well. The problem with this website is that anyone can access it without disclosing their information making it impossible to find out who was responsible for slandering your dealership. This makes it difficult for dealerships to try to make things right with the customer. It has been said in the past that this website was created by an individual that generally despises major businesses. Another problem is that dealerships are not realizing that this website is round and are completely ignoring the damaging effects that the website has on their reputation.

I first found about ripoffreport.com when my best friend who owns a marketing company showed me three negative reviews that were put up against his business. He took it very lightly and did not care much since he has a lot of loyal employees and he solicits the internet heavily to get people to come work for him.  I later started looking for a new job at one of the most successful Honda dealerships in the country only to find over fifteen rip off reports which come in the goggle search.  This got me curious so I started looking at other dealerships and found some of them on this site. To protect the integrity of these businesses, I will choose not to name any of them in this article.

So how do we handle this problem? We need to start thinking from two perspectives. As a dealership we must tighten up the ways in which we do business.  Consider what you would do to keep strong CSI scores and use those practices in all transactions from sales to service to parts. In other words, do not let your guard down and treat all customers with the respect that they command. We must also start to think like a consumer. This means that we should consider how we ourselves would handle a negative situation if we were a customer. Use these thoughts to fix any problems that you may have had with a customer and to avoid any future problems.

As a consumer, I know that when I search for a dealership I will look at all of the resources that I can find so I learn if I am comfortable doing business there. When I see one these reports I start to look for others and as I find that this dealership has over ten reports filed against them I am very likely to consider my alternatives and go somewhere else to purchase my car or get servicing done to my vehicle.

What does it cost the dealership?

Well it loses business, gross profit, credibility, and causes negative “word of mouth” advertising. I heard of many dealerships that have this problem but no one ever seems to care and ignores it.


How do dealers control this?

Well we monitor our dealer site on a daily basis for starters. Next, we look at how we do business with people and change our practices. We sharpen up our people skills and treat customers right. We do the right things by customers and do not play games with them by lying to them with low ball offers or mistreat them in the business office.  We service them and always ask for the best ratings. Also, when someone quits our dealership we end the relationship on a positive note and make sure they get paid what is owed to them. It might take time and investment of some money. However, the last thing you want is to have negative comments about your dealership when you are trying to bring as many visitors as you can to your web site.

Now, there will be times when you cannot satisfy a customer and you might catch a bad report. This is why the ripoffreport.com allows you to do a rebuttal and solve a problem to keep your profile on ripoffreport.com as low as possible. Keep a high profile of positive things about your dealership while keeping a low profile of the negative things and watch your business grow. An example of a website that will help uphold positive reputation management is dealerrater.com.
About the Author: Stan Sher is an Automotive Industry consultant and Account Manager for RedNumbat
 
Thanks for your guest post Stan. The RipoffReport has had a lot controversy behind it throughout the years. I have spoken to many other online reputation consultants and all agree that dealing with the RipoffReport is nothing less than a nightmare.

It's really difficult to get a comment removed, bogus or not. Dealers need to do what they can to not get listed on this site.

Here is a great post that will give you some more insight on the ReipoffReport..
 
The challenge with ripoffreport and other similar sites is that they are so heavily slanted against the Dealer. Any customer can post a negative review whether the facts are true or not.

I am curious as to the mediation measures these sites employ to ensure ACCURATE information. The Better Business Bureau at least allows a response from the affected business before posting a negative review. I have not seen a measure like this implemented on these other sites. Reputation Management IS important but we need to be sure that reputations aren't being impacted negatively without fairness in the equation.

Just my two cents...

Tom
 
I also worked to address a complaint on ripoffreport.com, and was then "trashed" by another user on that site that happened to be located in Arizona, then another in Nebraska, etc. Considering that these folks are well over a thousand miles from our dealership, it is hard to understand how they have an understanding of what is going on with us... Unfortunately this site seems to focus on folks who have no desire to resolve issues, but rather to start a vendetta against a business they do not like. We work incredibly hard to ensure full customer satisfaction, and take our online reviews seriously, however we have found sites like Dealer Rater and Edmunds to be much more relevant and useful to both car buyers and dealers...
 
Glen -

You are describing a problem that is obviously tough to control. One of the things we suggest and help our dealers with is mitigation of this problem. Obviously you can mitigate it with improved business practices, etc, but I would say most dealerships already do this and likely arbitrate the inaccurate claims.

Our suggestion is to create a number of additional web properties to dominate your top 10 search results for your dealership. Examples that will show up in your search result are:
- Facebook account
- MySpace
- Twitter
- Blog
- Flickr (or other photo hosting)
- Micro-site
- Press Releases! * * * These will jump into your top 10 results quick! This has worked best/fastest for our stores.
- Blog comments
- Local online yellowpage listings
- Non-profit, charity, or foundation website

Most of these are easy setups and can get quick results, but they also don't guarantee that the reports will move down the list of search results.

Chad
 
I am very familiar with ripoffreport.com. If you look further into it, you'll see that it is run by a criminal. Many people have told me that he uses customer complaints to extort dealers/companies. I am not an authority, but if you're company is mentioned on it, look into it. There are no rules, anyone can post anything there.
 
Well I know that there is a section for a rebuttal on that site. The problem is that it never gets removed. This site causes more harm to businesses than anything else with regards to reputation management. I think that there has to be a way to get that site shut down especially if it is evident that it is run by a criminal. What has this world come to? We let criminals ruin our reputation online. I agree that it is a great idea to setup multiple profiles and links that will stay at the top of the searches, it is a great idea.
 
In addition to what Chad added.

If you have multiple layers or content that are updated frequently you can keep the rating sites out of the searches for your name.

One thing dealers understand is that filing rebuttals on these sites also gives them MORE content and will help push them up in the SERPS so you need to be spot on when you do them.

Worse than having a ROR filed against you is looking like an ass when you try to correct it!!
 
Chad-

I think you have great input on the best way to fight against the negative reviews. By creating more content pages that rank well it will dramatically decrease the number of people who even see them. I would ad to your list Video SEO which can also help you take up space on the first page and getting indexing with lightning speed. This along with dealerrater.com also being indexed with tons of positive reviews would be the best case senerio on my opinion.