Amazon Attacks Fake Reviews and
Reviewers
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According to the LA Times, Amazon
is suing more than 1,000 writers for selling recommendations (and reviews!) for
books (and other items) they didn’t buy.
If
you have read The Frugal Book Promoter, you know that I recommend writing reviews of other authors’
books as a way to network and as a way to give back to the industry that makes
books possible. In fact, a free and unbiased review is the nicest thing you can
give to an author as a token of appreciation. And one of the best places you
can post your review is on Amazon where it has the best chance of being read by
thousands of readers. There are, of course, other places to post them including
your own blog, Goodreads, and other sites. You can also volunteer to review for
sites like BookPleasures, MyShelf and Midwest Book Review that depend on those
who love to read to keep their sites going even when profit margins are slim.
It
is reported that Amazon sees reviews that are too glowing as a danger sign. That’s
fair. Professional reviews can be rave reviews, but no book is perfect. In fact,
a review is more trustworthy (and therefore sells more books--proved by studies over the years!) if it does point
out places where the book is weak. Such critiques needn’t be snarky. They can
be tactful, firm, and helpful to readers and the author alike.
Perhaps
it was the offers on Fiverr.com that finally ticked Amazon off enough to do
this. Many offered reviews for $5. And some of those promised five-star reviews. And, yes, this is—to put it
mildly—unethical. You’ve probably seen me discourage authors and publishers from
paying for reviews in the past because they aren’t credible. People like
bookstore owners, librarians, and other publishing industry professionals
generally know they have been paid for even if they come from Publishers Weekly or
Kirkus. In fact, those magazines put those reviews in a separate place or mark
them differently so their readers will know! Reviews that aren’t credible are a
waste of money and time. And, did I mention unethical? Ahem!
Some
of these reviews offer to post reviews using multiple accounts and IP
addresses. I say, go after them Amazon. This kind of thing ruins the process
for everyone!
Nevertheless,
I’ve seen Amazon pull reviews based on flimsy excuses in the past and so I
worry.
The
trouble with pulling reviews too aggressive is that they may use whether a
person has bought something by their own sales logarithms to make their judgement. That
seems like a good idea at first, but their site is not the only one that sells
an item so if their logarithms are picking up reviews of items not purchased
from them, they be wrong, terribly wrong.
Here
is why:
- It is a publishing tradition that publishers and writers provide books at no cost--often special review copies or galleys-- to those who write reviews of their book (s). These books would not show up as sales anywhere.
- Many who write reviews of a book or product may have received the book as a gift for their birthday or a holiday.
- Many write reviews of books or products that they buy at a bookstore or any other retail outlet.
- Some may write reviews of books they borrow from the library or buy from secondhand bookstores.
So are the bulleted review tracks above indications they are fake reviews? I don’t know how Amazon is selecting those people it will sue, (and I know they have plenty of money to waste if their selection is offbase and they lose!), but I think they are once again on very shaky ground.
In the meantime, if you review for Amazon (and you should), be liberal with disclaimers like this:
“Disclaimer:
This reviewer received a book in exchange for an unbiased and fair review. No
fee was charged either the author or the publisher.”
And
do avoid touting your own book in the review. The link used in the review (the one that
Amazon provides) takes readers back to your profile page. That, dear
author/reviewer should be enough for you. Offering this to authors and
reviewers is indeed a gift from Amazon and we should not abuse the hand that
feeds us.
Note:
For more on this topic see the LA Times’
Technology page in their business section, Thursday, October 2, 2015.
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Carolyn Howard-Johnson is the author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally books for writers as well as a novelist and poet. She is working on the third major book in the HowToDoItFrugally series of books called Getting Great Reviews Frugally and Ethically and she just published a book of poetry perfect for this silly political season. It is Imperfect Echoes, http://bit.ly/ImperfectEchoes. Her Web site is http://howtodoitfrugally.com
Carolyn Howard-Johnson is the author of the multi award-winning HowToDoItFrugally books for writers as well as a novelist and poet. She is working on the third major book in the HowToDoItFrugally series of books called Getting Great Reviews Frugally and Ethically and she just published a book of poetry perfect for this silly political season. It is Imperfect Echoes, http://bit.ly/ImperfectEchoes. Her Web site is http://howtodoitfrugally.com