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Trip Advisor forced to drop ‘trust’ claim from website

February 2, 2012

UK ad watchdog the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has ordered TripAdvisor to rewrite some of its marketing claims, following complaints by hotels that the site had said that its holiday reviews could be “trusted”.

tripadvisor.JPG
The ASA said it was concerned that consumers might be fooled by fraudulent posts since the entries could be made “without any form of verification”.
The tripadvisor.co.uk homepage now contains no reference to the word “trust” and simply describes itself as “the world’s largest travel site”.
However, its international tripadvisor.com address – which is accessible in the UK – continues to describe its content as the “world’s most trusted travel advice” in the corresponding part of the page. It adds elsewhere that “you’ll find real hotel reviews you can trust”.
When asked about this the ASA said that its remit only extended to claims targeted at a UK audience, so it would not be pursuing changes at the .com site.
TripAdvisor described the ruling as a “highly technical view” of “copy that was used in a limited capacity”.
However, the watchdog said that the ruling served as a warning to all UK-focused sites with user-generated material.
The ASA said that the US-based firm’s site originally carried statements saying that it contained “reviews that you can trust” and that it had “more than 50 million honest travel reviews”.
It said that two hotels and the online reputation firm Kwikchex, which represented others, had complained that the claims were misleading since they could not be substantiated.
The advertising body said it acknowledged that reviewers were asked to sign a declaration that their reviews were real and that they had no incentive or competitive interest with the places commented on.
It also recognised that the site said that it used “advanced and highly effective fraud systems” to identify and remove fake content.
However, the ASA said it was still possible that “non-genuine” reviews could appear on the site undetected and that users might not be able to spot them.
It warned that this was particularly a problem in cases where an establishment only had a small number of reviews. It added that offering hoteliers a right to reply did not fully address the problem.
The ASA ordered the site to avoid running adverts in the same form again and said it must not claim or imply that all its reviews were from real travellers, or were honest, real or trusted.
Chief executive Guy Parker said that advertising rules policed by the authority applied to companies’ claims on their own websites.
“This is a classic example of the sort of thing that members of public are complaining to us about,” he said.
“Advertisers must apply the same scrutiny to their websites, as they do to their campaigns in paid-for space. And don’t major on trustworthiness if fake reviews can appear.”
The ASA’s ruling was based on a survey of the site carried out in July 2011 when it was still owned by the travel booking service Expedia.
It has since been spun off as a separate entity.

Uncategorized advertising, content, marketing, Travel, UK

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