Yelpâs servings could use a dash of candor
I like Yelp. The review site can be a nifty way to check out a restaurant before risking a meal.
But is Yelp also a shakedown racket for merchants? Some restaurant owners say the San Francisco company is unusually aggressive in trying to get businesses to pay hundreds of dollars in monthly âsponsorshipâ fees to improve their ranking in search results and to move their most positive review to the top of the page.
They also say paying Yelp is often the only way to counter negative reviews posted by rival eateries -- a common digital-era practice, business owners say, in the highly competitive restaurant industry.
âWe felt like we had no choice,â Jamie Inzunza, owner of Mammaâs Brick Oven Pizza in South Pasadena, said of the $350 she pays Yelp every month. âWe decided that we had to spend all this money to protect ourselves once the bad reviews started appearing.â
Jeremy Stoppelman, Yelpâs chief executive, said that with more than 5 million reviews on the site, itâs only natural that some businesses would be displeased with whatâs being written about them. About a third of the reviews are for restaurants.
Stoppelman said Yelp doesnât strong-arm merchants and that the siteâs sponsorship program -- its main source of revenue -- doesnât offer âpay for playâ to advertisers.
âThere are a lot of reasons for business owners to spread false rumors about Yelp,â he said. âThose that get a bunch of negative reviews suddenly have a bone to pick with us.â
Tell that to Tom Mulvihill, owner of Thai Issan restaurant in Cerritos. He received a letter from Yelp last summer informing him that his business had earned a rating of four stars out of five.
âItâs official -- people on Yelp love you!â the letter said.
Shortly afterward, Mulvihill said he received a call from a Yelp saleswoman urging him to pay a minimum of $150 a month for sponsorship.
âShe said sponsorship would allow us to hide the negative reviews and elevate the positive ones,â he recalled.
Mulvihill declined. Three weeks later, he said, his restaurantâs rating dropped from four stars to 3 1/2 , where it remains today.
Hardball sales tactics? Maybe. Or maybe, as Stoppelman said, âreviews come and go for businesses all the time.â
Also, for every disgruntled business owner out there, thereâs another whoâs had a good experience with Yelp.
âIt may not work for everyone, but itâs working for us,â said Carlo Lomeli, owner of Lomeliâs Italian Restaurant in Gardena, which pays $250 monthly for Yelp sponsorship. âMy customers are knowledgeable about the site.â
But Yelp-savvy customers also mean Yelp-savvy competitors. Inzunza at Mammaâs Brick Oven Pizza said she noticed last year that every time a nasty review appeared on the site about her restaurant, a glowing review popped up for a pizza place down the street.
âWe decided we had to advertise on Yelp because we wanted to make sure we could play up the good reviews,â she said.
Yelp sponsors are able to move their best review to the top of the list. The heading over the sponsored review says this is one of the businessâ âfavorite reviews.â
An advertiserâs restaurant also may top the search results whenever a Yelp user searches for similar establishments -- that is, someone looking for pizza in South Pasadena would be more likely to see Mammaâs Brick Oven Pizza at the top of the page than a non-sponsor restaurant.
Now that her business has received more than 90 reviews, Inzunza said, she no longer feels it necessary to pay for sponsorship. She said she would be canceling as soon as her contract expires.
On the other hand, Joompong Kongchareon, owner of Joom Bangkok Cafe in Los Angeles, is taking no chances. He said he decided to pay $300 a month for Yelp sponsorship after a salesperson from the website called âover and overâ shortly after his restaurant opened about a year ago.
âIf you donât give them money, maybe they will put a bad review up high,â he said. âThat would hurt my business. People come to us from Yelp.
âThis is insurance that I wonât get real bad reviews at the top.â
My feeling is that Yelp offers an impressive service for both consumers and merchants, but the site could do a better job on the transparency front.
How many users, for example, know what it means when a company is identified as a âYelp sponsorâ? How many people know that a business has to pay to have a âfavorite reviewâ topping the list?
Yelpâs Stoppelman pointed out that by clicking on a âwhatâs this?â link accompanying a sponsorâs âfavorite review,â users are informed that âYelp sponsors can highlight one of their favorite reviews at the top of their business page.â
He said this language makes clear that money has changed hands.
âSponsor means advertiser,â Stoppelman said. âItâs a synonym.â
He also repeatedly said that Yelp is merely following in Googleâs footsteps when it comes to selling placement to advertisers, although he insisted that âYelp has far more disclosure than Google does.â
Maybe itâs me, but I find Googleâs search results to be different from Yelpâs user-generated reviews.
Do a Google search for âcellphonesâ and youâll see highlighted âsponsored linksâ at the top of the page, as well as sponsored links down the right side, separated by a line from the main search results.
I have no trouble distinguishing between what advertisers have paid for on Google and whatâs the real deal.
A search for L.A. pizza restaurants on Yelp produces a similarly highlighted sponsored result, but itâs lumped in with the unsponsored results.
But the real issue is the reviews. I believe Stoppelman when he says Yelp doesnât punish non-sponsors by moving up negative reviews, despite what some merchants might think.
He said thereâs a secret algorithm at work, resulting in occasionally scattershot placement of reviews rather than, say, chronological order.
Yet I think sponsorship would be more easily understood by including a prominent link to a page explaining that a sponsor pays Yelp cash every month to be more visible in search results and to move its rosiest review to the top of the heap.
As it stands, Stoppelman said, fewer than 1% of all reviewed businesses on the site are sponsors. But he also acknowledged that privately held Yelp has yet to turn a profit, and that doing so hinges on increasing the number of sponsors.
With a business model like that, why settle for anything less than complete candor?
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David Lazarusâ column runs Wednesdays and Sundays. Send your tips or feedback to [email protected].