The Power of the Negative Review
Internet marketing — and affiliate selling in particular — involves a lot of fear. Not in the sales pitch — although there is certainly a lot of “buy this now or you’ll regret it!” messaging — but in the attitudes of the seller vis-a-vis the potential customer.
And let’s be clear: these are customers we’re talking about, not “visitors” or “readers”. Don’t sugar-coat it: if they’re giving you money, directly or not, they are your customers.
Almost everyone engaged in affiliate selling exudes boundless enthusiasm and a “it-can-do-it-all” attitude in an attempt to convince a potential customer to push the Buy! button and hand over their money.
Desensitization
The problem, of course, is that potential customers then become desensitized to the whole sales process and view everything with a certain degree of skepticism. (As well they should.) With everyone babbling on exuberantly about how wonderful the product is and how it’s the cure for your problem and how it’s so easy and how only a few are being let in on the secret… well, really, is there any doubt that the conversion ratios — how many people see the message versus how many actually buy the product — are so low?
This is why, in a crowded arena of me-too sales pages, the negative review has a disproportionate amount of power. Not to dissuade potential customers from buying — the sales pages already do a good job of that — but to convert them into actual customers. Let me explain.
Idealism is inauthentic
Nothing is truly perfect in real life. Ideals are pursued, but never reached. If asked to describe your spouse’s faults, you can probably rhyme off a half-dozen without thinking. But so what? You know what those faults are and you’ve accepted them. They’re part of the price you pay to have that person in your life. The faults are outweighed by the positive attributes that drew you to him or her in the first place.
This is why the fear of saying anything negative about something you want to sell is counter-productive. It doesn’t seem authentic, to push a concept that Seth Godin espouses.
Negatives are relative
But negatives are not absolute. What you think is wrong with me (of which there are many!) my wife may consider attractive. Just because you think a book can’t teach you something doesn’t mean that it’s not useful to someone else.
Books are a perfect case in point. Look up any Amazon book that’s a bestseller — say in the top ten — in its category. Read the most recent customer reviews for that book. Which reviews were the most useful to you? The exuberant utterances of the personal (or paid) friends of the author or the ones that say “I didn’t like this book because…“.
Look at my last book: Make Easy Money with Google, about to celebrate its first anniversary, has now been reviewed by no less than 41 customers on Amazon.com. While I’m happy to report that it’s maintained a steady 4-star rating, there are several quite negative reviews. Here’s a sampling of them:
- Perhaps this book would be useful for a person totally inexperienced in just about everything, including tying their shoes.
- … this book is aimed squarely at the absolute beginner, who have no idea how to build sites, and who want in on the money race.
- Overall, valuable if you’re a novice that wants to get into internet publishing monetized by Adsense but worthless for pretty much anyone else.
Ouch! I can’t say those reviews thrill me, but they’re honest. They’re authentic. I’m sure they’ve put people off from buying the book. But I bet those people were never in my target audience. However, a novice looking for a good introductory text on AdSense would look at those comments and say Hey, this sounds right for me! and he or whe will buy the book.
To such a person, those negatives are actually positives, because they don’t want a jargon-filled book that they can’t understand.
Expose those warts!
Recently I wrote a review of a software product called Desktop AdSense Cash Machine. It’s not a perfect piece of software by any means, but it does an adequate job. I acquired resale rights to it and decided to sell it to anyone who wanted to buy it, but given its limitations I priced it low at only $10, not $37 or even $67 like some others do. Because I thought $10 was a fair price for what it actually does.
Now, I’ve not sold a ton of the product or anything, but I got some great feedback about my review. People thanked me for the detailed review (with screenshots) and for giving my honest opinion about it. It was like a breath of fresh air for them.
All I did was expose AdSense Cash Machine’s warts: here’s the product, it does this, it doesn’t do that, it’s worth this much, take it or leave it.
An opportunity for the geek
Luckily, geeks excel at negative reviews. They’re happy to deconstruct products and ideas and to tell you exactly why they won’t work and how to fix them. Where the marketing type wants to build, the geek wants to destroy. Well, maybe destroy is too strong a work. Deconstruct would be a better way to phrase it. And that’s where your skills (you, the geek reading this) come into play.
Does the thought of writing a sales page make you sick? Then don’t! Write an authentic review instead. Don’t just parrot the sales copy. Don’t shy away from exposing the warts. Describe what the product does and what it doesn’t do. Who will benefit from it, who won’t. How to use it, how to abuse it.
Don’t underestimate the power of the negative review!
Technorati Tags: affiliate, marketing, negative, sales, essays, AdSense





I was in a really negative mood when I wrote the content for my first website. In retrospect I think the brutal honesty about industry problems increased my credability. I have gotten emails thanking me for “telling me like it is”.
Well written article that indirectly points out that too many sales page testimonials are written by a few ‘insiders’ because of their name recognition and/or list size.
Every time I see a sales page that’s packed with ‘guru’ testimonials then receive an emaild announcement from them trying to sell me the product, I immediately distrust the whole pitch.
IF a well known marketer actually writes an honest opinion of the good and bad as they saw it, I pay more attention BUT I still mistrust many because they aren’t consistently honest in their reviews.
Too many are so busy promoting and taking care of business to to evaluate what they are recommending so they use the pre-written messages written by the product’s creator.
Anyone know if there ’s a forum with this site and what the url is?
These are really great posts. I appreciate your sharing this stuff with us and providing an open forum for comments. Very Web 2.0 !
I just bought your new book yesterday and coincidentally, I’ve also heard the name Eric Giguere for the first time.
Up till last night, I’ve managed only 26 pages and I must say it’s a good read for the really authentic newbies. Now with that kind of tone and flow, it won’t take long for me (web design newbie) to finish the book.
So Eric, with the same tone and flow, can you write one for Programming? If you do, you are guaranteed of 1 customer even before you finished writing……that’s me.
Very true! Especially about desensitization…I find negative reviews — the “real person speaking” perspective — very porwerful!