Why isn't SEOmoz a BBB accredited Business?
-
I'm just curious.
I help run an online resource-based business. Recent'y, I've done a fair amount of research about becoming a BBB accredited business and it all seems to point to it being worth the money. No only for the link, but also for the potential increase in conversion due to the trust that comes along with their brand. It just seems to make good business sense.
But I noticed that SEOmoz isn't accredited, and it made me wonder if there was something I wasn't considering? I mean, why wouldn't they want a valuable link like that?
Does anyone know anything I don't?
-
-
-
I am not a BBB fan. Here are some excerpts from an earlier thread, beginning with a post from me
-
There is a decidedly less sunny view of the Better Business Bureau. It has been the subject of many journalistic exposes. Critics say it supresses consumer complaints for cash, acts as a shill for its paying members, and operates a pay for play scheme. The basic accusation is that it is a bad guy posing as a good guy. Wolfgang Puck and the Boston Ritz Carlton Hotel got failing grades. So did Disney World -- until it became a paying member.
-
The Connecticut Attorney General opened an investgation at one point.
See the ABC News 20/20 expose
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yo8kfV9kONw
After a highly unflattering series of columns in the New York Times, The BBB tried to defend itself here
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/10/your-money/10haggler.html
The BBB may have high domain authority. But whether it is wise for businesses to be associated with such an organization is quite another matter.
i agree with a previous poster: local Chamber of Commerce directories are the way to go
-
-
**Aaron Schinke **| July 5th, 2011
I have heard some of these horror stories as well. However I don't think the vast majority of people have. So, even if the BBB just passes the perception of trust along with the link juice it's probably worht it. Perception is reality.
<a rel="nofollow">###### 2</a> <a rel="nofollow">###### 0</a> ReplyPermalink
-
<a name="137344f8f9416707_jtc147147"> </a>**BathroomGetaways **| July 11th, 2011
I think part of the reason they get a bad rep is because just because you're not a member, doesn't mean you won't get turned in. For instance, we had a hosting client that turned us in because we HAD to raise her hosting rates and she didn't feel she should have to pay (not very bright person was she). So she complained to the BBB, despite the fact we're not a member. We got a letter, we let them know how we resolved the issue, and they considered the matter CLOSED, and said we did everything we could do satisfy her.
So my guess with many of the companies that have had the "pay for play" complaint, isn't that they were necessarily being strong-armed into paying to join, but that before they joined, they weren't resolving complaints because they probably didn't fully realize they had to.
I agree the BBB walks the gray line, but lets not forget that 20/20 and other news outlets love to latch on to stories like that about big company or org messing with the little guy, and they are probably worse from a "bad standpoint" (20/20 and news outlets that is) than the BBB could ever dream of being.
The media are whore's that will air anything they can. The BBB, while not awesome, does provide a valuable service to both businesses and consumers. What's the news media really do other than stir the pot for ratings?
<a rel="nofollow"></a>
-
-
But of course I'd be willing to reconsider my previous post.
Perhaps the BBB would care to avail itself of my complaints resolution services?
My fees are very reasonable.
And everybody wins!
This is a joke. I'm not serious.
But the BBB is. Which is a problem.
-
<a name="137344f8f9416707_jtc146406"> </a>**Djjinx13 **| July 1st, 2011
Hmmm
I think the point of the post was in direct referece to the search engine marketing implications of BBB which is not only a powerful backlink, but as another poster pointed out it appears its "brand" gets a Google human "trust" bump which is understandable as Google always states they are about the user not the fringe opinons (not blasting your opinion.) Just stating that in consumers eyes the BBB is trustworthy ( i understand that is you point that it should not be) but once again the point I believe is the SEM benefits. Now in the future if consumers begin to gain your views that "trust" metric will begin to fall... But that is not today!!! and Today it appears in local search asepect a BBB link is good in consumers eyes and search enigne eyes so i see no reason if ROI justifies it one would not get it.
once again just my opinion
Edited by Djjinx13 on July 1st, 2011 at 6:16 am<a rel="nofollow"></a>
-
-
-
-
-
I did not see any change to the sales conversion rate after adding BBB. However I had other trust (authority) graphics on the site.
D&B also told me the same thing - many companies requesting our company report (which was pot possible at that time). I have always questioned the validity of the data in D&B because a lot of it is self-reported (no audit or verification process). I also have experience purchasing the D&B credit builder service (which can be manipulated to help build one's credit score).
Listing of your site in D&B may be an extremely small factor in Google's algorithm but I don't think it is worth the expense. I would prefer to spend the money on the Yahoo Directory and Best of The Web directory.
On your site you need some type of major authority "seal" to gain the confidence of site visitors. D&B would be a very low priority one. TrustE, McAfee Secure are perhaps the top ones.
Last advice about D&B - make certain supplier invoices are paid perfectly on time and your credit score should increase over time. Your D&B credit score is critical in being able to obtain open account terms from suppliers.
-
Loren,
Thank you for this generous sharing of your experience.
I have been contacted by BBB but did not pay for membership.
Did you notice any lift in sales after posting the BBB badge on your website?
Do you have a similar story about D&B listings?
D&B has contacted me several times telling me that people are requesting my report. I asked them to tell me who is requesting and then I will consider providing my information. I also told them that they should be paying me since my information is a revenue-producing product for them. They don't "get" that logic.
Thanks!
-
I have been operating an online furniture e-commerce site for over 8 years. Once I became a member of BBB and my experience and opinions are as follows.
1. As soon as paid the fee to become a BBB member the rating of my company substantially increased. The dialogue that I had with the aggressive telemarketer sales rep made me feel that this was their strong arm tactic - pay and we improve your rating.
2. BBB is very aggressive in persuading a prospect to join. I think the sales reps receive a large portion of their income based on sales commissions.
3. The majority of consumers perceive BBB as being some type of government related organization. This means that consumers trust and believe that BBB is a legitimate entity. Because of this perception the BBB online seal helps gain credibility when displayed on websites.
4. Perhaps the listing in BBB is a very minor favorable SEO benefit.
I've talked to other company owners who had a similar experience as mine. They agree with my conclusion as follows.
The BBB comes across as a "scam" type organization. Buying into their system is a necessary evil because so many online shoppers erroneously believe that BBB is like a government entity and operates ethically.
I'm doing my best to not pay the membership fees and make a statement that supports my negative feelings towards how BBB operates. Many of my peers are also avoiding BBB.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Does Dofollow links from forumn profiles, blog comments, business directories or article directories etc have any impact?
Hi guys, So looking at my competitors in my city a lot of the people ranking on 2nd, 3rd pages and so forth have little or no quality backlinks, instead, their links are all from business directories, forum profiles and blog comments. I saw google employees saying easy to create links hold very little value and it's easy for the algorithm to distinguish been easy to obtain backlinks and difficult ones. From what I see on my competition backlink profiles, they may not get them to the front page but they do get them to pages, two three and four. I was wondering if creating say 20-30 easy links per week and also focus on obtaining high-quality backlinks. Would they be any penalties for 20-30 easy to make links a week from Google? Cheers
Link Building | | sydneygardening0 -
Best Methods and Tools for Monitoring your Website's Backlinks
Recently, I've launched two websites. I want to make sure I'm doing a good job monitoring our link building efforts. I'm see a lot of tools out there to supplement my use of Open Site Explorer. What I want to know is what tools I should be using to monitor my links? My ultimate goal would be to have the data to track the number of links I'm adding a month so that I can use it for reporting. There is another layer. Because the sites are new, OSE is actually not reporting any links found. I can only find reported links through Google Search Console. Any advice? Is this something where I will just have to wait for everything to get indexed?
Link Building | | JasonKhoo0 -
Does paying a reviewer for an impartial review violate Google's guidelines?
When a company pays for an impartial review from a website, should these links be no-followed? I am confident that paid positive reviews are seen as a manipulation of search, but is paying for an impartial review okay?
Link Building | | RG_SEO0 -
Any benefits to having Wikipedia links now they are 'no-followed' (apart from traffic and natural link prof.)
I see that Wikipedia outbound links are all no-followed, is there any benefit (aside from the traffic) for having links here now ? For example is their co-citation and co-occurance benefits. I know there is without the links since from seeing previous Moz content about this saying Google getting good at connecting brand/s and topic mentions on a page (without any links) so appreciate Wikipedia is still good for that sort of thing. And a no-followed link is obviously good for the potential traffic. But is there any additional SEO benefit to having a no followed link on a wikipedia entry/stub too ? (aside from its contribution to your no-followed links which in turn contribute to a natural looking link profile) Cheers Dan
Link Building | | Dan-Lawrence0 -
Why aren't my blog links counting?
In our blog posts, we frequently include links to our product pages on our official site. However, the blog root domain is not showing up on Open Site Explorer for any of these product pages. In other words, why isn't Google counting our blog as a unique root domain? If it helps, here is the link to the blog: http://jampaper.wordpress.com/ Thanks for your help!
Link Building | | jampaper0 -
I've just started my backlinking research on dentists. What are these links?
When you go to the URL and the link isn't there, what does it mean? Looks like the link may have been around since 2011. Any clues? What is an old comment on the story or something? From openexplorer URL: http://espn.go.com/espn/espys/?ov=bestplay Title: 2011 ESPYS - July 2011 ESPNHD Anchor Text: http://www.l a d e n t i s t.c o m (I don't want a link to them so I spaced it) Page Authority: 51 Domain Authority 100 Number of Links: 7 Followable = YES Origin = External Target URL: http://www.l a d e n t i s t .com/
Link Building | | Czubmeister0 -
Why aren't my backlinks showing up?
I've recently switched hosting my site on www.vamospaella.com to www.vamospaella.co.uk (using a 301 redirect) and I've been building backlinks. According to Majesticseo, vamospaella.co.uk has 38 backlinks with 8 referrring domains and vamospaella.com has 15 external backlinks from 11 referring domains. Some of these backlinks date back a month, while others have shown up in the last week. However, I have seen no improvement in my Google rankings for my keywords. Why is this?
Link Building | | RMelly0 -
The quality of links is measured by website relevancy to my business?
In Open Site Explorer links are being valued with Domain Authority and page Authority. My question is if you measure somehow the relevancy of the website with the business of the website to which the links are going? I have learned that an important part of the value of links is the relevancy of the website with my business. I am seeing for example a link from a children website to a car related website as very much valued. I dont see very much relevancy with both so I wonder you take this into account.
Link Building | | ceesie0