When talking with clients, one of the most frequent questions we get is: can we only post positive reviews on our website and hide the rest? And the quick answer: no! Publishing only positive reviews for consumers to see — known as review suppression (or "review gating," or "selective review publication") — may seem like a quick and easy way to improve your online reputation, but in reality it is a violation that puts your brand at serious legal and financial risk.
A fast-fashion retailer for women was recently fined $4.2 million by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for suppressing its negative reviews. This company installed a third-party review management interface that automatically published all positive reviews while withholding hundreds of thousands of negative reviews from their site.
Review suppression can include any process — automated or not — by which positive reviews (typically reviews with a rating of 4-5 stars) are published online while negative reviews (typically reviews with a rating of 1-3 stars) are hidden from consumers. The retailer discussed above certainly isn't the only company partaking in such behavior; many other players have implemented similar practices and policies.
But agencies like the FTC are beginning to crack down — 10 third-party reviews vendors recently received warning notices from the FTC based on their questionable review management practices.
You might be asking: what is the Federal Trade Commission, and what can they do? The FTC is a federal agency that aims to protect consumers by regulating unfair, deceptive, or fraudulent business practices. They have the authority to enforce broad prohibition against companies or individuals who participate in these types of behavior.
And if your team works with an external reviews vendor, you might assume that you are protected from penalties inflicted by agencies like the FTC. After all, shouldn't that vendor be responsible for any wrongdoing? Unfortunately, that's rarely how it plays out. According to the FTC, in regard to working with a third-party reviews vendor, "you can be held responsible for what they do on your behalf."