Company bribes its fans to secretly flood websites with praise
Filed under: Ripoffs and Scams, Technology, Transportation, Travel
What would you say if you knew a company had identified people who post a lot about its product online, tracked them down, invited them on a junket where they were wined and dined, and then sent them back off into the world to say as many nice things as possible?Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines is doing it. According to Consumerist, it found 50 people who posted a lot about Royal Caribbean cruises, recruited them, and now their posts are "carefully monitored" to ensure that they "remain positive and frequent." But even though these posters are shilling for the cruise line, they never identify themselves as doing so.
They're called the Royal Caribbean Champions, and they're just another reason why you can't trust a thing you read in reader forums anymore.
Companies see activity like this as "viral," and it's true that nurturing your best customers is just good business. But I see this particular under-the-radar inducement to monitor their postings as deceptive, particularly because the posters never tell you they've been figuratively bribed with freebies to spout praise. Two months ago, electronics manufacturer Belkin was nabbed doing a similar thing using Amazon.com.
Two years ago, I took the Liberty of the Seas out of New York City to cover the megaship's launch for the New York Post. Although I really enjoyed the ship's nearly identical older sister, Freedom of the Seas, I had some frank things to say about corner-cutting on the new vessel. Royal Caribbean must have known it was going to be facing some questioning reviews like mine. I didn't know it, but on the very same journey I was taking, perhaps even at the next dining table over, the Royal Caribbean Champions were being schmoozed and groomed. When I disembarked to write my story, the Champions went forth to be fruitful.
Public relations tactics like this degrade value all around. First of all, all the websites that these minions are posting on (we can't know all of them because they don't identify themselves) are rendered less trustworthy and therefore less useful. As I have said before, our ability to use the web as a research tool is diminished when we don't know which sites are padded and which are truthful. (For the record, CruiseCritic.com, which was the only website cited as a major hub for the Champions, wrote in support of my disapproving assessment of the Liberty of the Seas.)
The other problem is that now that word has leaked out, this activity makes Royal Caribbean look desperate. In my opinion, some quibbles aside, Royal Caribbean is a truly excellent product, and I personally have more fun on it than many of the other cruise lines out there. But shenanigans like this (following on other embarrassing fiascoes by the line) make the line seem starving for good reviews. Royal Caribbean has paid to send undercover boosters among us. When I have something nice to say, and there's plenty of nice things to day, I don't want people to accuse me of being one of them.
Since Royal Caribbean itself didn't have anything to say within the Consumerist post, I sent a rep the link to the story and asked if he'd like to make an official comment about the Champions. That was a couple of days ago. No response. I guess if you want to hear what the cruise line has to say, you'll have to read message board posts from its secret moles.
Update: Royal Caribbean is still ignoring me, but it elected to contact one travel industry blogger at Tripso to dispute some facts in her longer exposé, and the resulting article can be read here. Meanwhile, blogger Edward Hasbrouck talks about how companies have been intentionally targeting travel review sites for years, citing a 2006 travel exec conference at which strategies were outlined: "people are paid to spend months, in between assignments, creating profiles and posting "neutral" messages to establish a credible online persona and background from which to post their secretly-paid advertising messages."
As for CruiseCritic.com, where many of the Champions were recruited and spent their time posting (and where editors apparently knew it was happening), the fur has really been flying on the message boards, which have turned into an all-out witch hunt for Royal Caribbean's spam-shillers.
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
3-13-2009 @ 11:31AM
skye said...
Isn't Royal Caribbean the cruise line that people keep falling overboard on ? Haven't been on it, probably won't in the future after hearing of these additional shenanigans. I hate deceptive consumer practices.
Reply
3-13-2009 @ 4:58PM
Vega said...
Bloggers are hysterical. You cite each other all the time "as reported in the Consumerist", yet none of you really ever know what you are talking about. No fact checking -- you just quote each other as if it is gospel and spew forth.
What are the fact re: this issue? Well, you won't find them on any blog, that's for sure.
If you cannot trust what you read on forums, you can't trust what you read on blogs, and really you cannot trust what you read ANYMORE ANY WHERE.
Each must come to their own conclusion, you must determine what "facts" you are comfortable with. If posts on forums don't "do it for you", then simply move on. Find a better info source. Go back to reading month's-old guidebooks.
Vega
Reply
3-14-2009 @ 6:09PM
Robbie said...
There are factual errors in this article (I am a Royal Champion and am in a position to know this) that lead me to think that Jaxon is simply regurgitating the most sensational of the so-called facts he reads (and furthers) on other forums. I agree that bloggers are their own life-support system.
The fact that I am only aware of this blog because he cross-posted there will tell you how self-sustaining the blogosphere attempts to be. Has Jaxon actually researched and fact-checked, he would be aware of the other groups who were made RCs and would also have to conceed that any RCs have received nothing for their trouble but his slander online.
When he says that we were given express instructions, he is simply lying. It is untrue and had he done any amount of research, he wold know this. I'm sorry he had a bad cruise (which is likely the motivation for this tripe) but most adults would simply pick up the pieces of their life and move on.
Jaxon has presumed that all negative comment she reads are true and all the contrary ones are convenient lies. I have no idea what this little blog is about but they clearly have low standards for contributors.
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3-14-2009 @ 8:22PM
david said...
I'm not very impressed with your defense. So I'll side with the blogger on this and avoid RC.
3-13-2009 @ 9:57PM
Penny said...
I am a little disappointed that Royal Caribbean would stoop to these shady tactics.
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3-15-2009 @ 10:33AM
Rich said...
Lots of companies do this. An LA microphone maker pays people to go online and say how much they like their ribbon microphones. It happens all over.
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3-14-2009 @ 8:57PM
jack said...
these folks have a future in the white house.... like right now. popularity plunging? just call rcc
Reply
3-15-2009 @ 5:22AM
TravelNomad said...
As a travel agent of 35 years, I can agree with the writer on many of his points.
My boss has me travel even more then I did 20 years ago, to personally inspect hotels and cruise lines, because we cannot believe all the lies and distortions we see on line.,
Even independent sites, have NO control over who posts what.
A few years ago, I was inspecting hotels on a certain Caribbean island. And I was in shock that one hotel had received such rave reviews on many travel web sites.
It had been bought a year before, the place was a wreck with construction and no one should have stayed there,
SO, I called some other hotel owners in the field when I got back and said what is going on here. They said we lose business if we don't rank high on travel sites.
We all now have relatives, friends, coworkers writing these sites with glowing reviews . I said this dishonest. He replied, it's called staying in business.
it is a shame that these hotels and cruise lines have to resort to this. What can you believe on most travel sites these days
Even travel book sites stretch the flattery. And travel writers also. Or they won't get invited to review new ships or hotels.
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