cyberknight
As long as I breathe, I attack.
- Location
- Land of confusion
Just dont trust wiggle, they did not use my poor review but would not say why and did not even say why they would not , got a refund instead.
A company I do some work with has a pierce-faced young woman working in their office spending 4 hours per day composing online reviews under myriad names on different forums making this company sound fantastic.
Mind you, I have received upgrades and superb treatment from a particular hotel we stay at in Cyprus for penning genuinely positive comments (on facebook & trip Advisor) about how good this place is.
That's why I only read reviews when there are more than a critical mass - at least a couple hundred. I figure at least the first half dozen will be from the owner/ their family and friends.
It's not fool proof (as in your example), but it seems to be the more reviews the more I'll take notice of them.
For the statistics fans, it's the central limit theorem in modern day usage
I read the reviews for Yanis Varoufakis' 'The Global Minotaur' on Amazon - pretty much all excellent except for a couple of 1 stars. Naturally I read them. Both admitted, at the end of the long ranty reviews that they hadn't actually read the book. They just didn't like Varoufakis. (The book is bloody good by the way, if anyone is interested...)
The holiday accommodation reviews are priceless - the things that people will whine about. I once read one who gave the bottom rating based on the fact that the white wine was insufficiently chilled...
My sister is thinking of running a small B&B somewhere nice when she retires in a couple of years time.The holiday accommodation reviews are priceless - the things that people will whine about. I once read one who gave the bottom rating based on the fact that the white wine was insufficiently chilled...
My sister is thinking of running a small B&B somewhere nice when she retires in a couple of years time.
She likes watching that ghastly 'Four in a Bed' programme on Channel 4, presumably to warn her of the pitfalls before launching herself into the stress of it anyway ... (I thought retirement was about relaxation and fun, not about catering to the whims of ultra-fussy guests, but she says she would get bored not having work to do. I don't get it!)
A recent show included a B&B at Dent station. For those of you who don't know it, Dent Station is on the gorgeous little Settle-Carlisle railway line in the Yorkshire Dales. Apparently the station building is now in private hands and is being run as a B&B. One pair of guests complained about a train going past and waking them up!
I would have thought that anybody staying at a converted station building on a working railway line would expect that, but there you go ...
Oh - a shameless plug ... My forum ride on 2nd July goes through that part of the Dales and right past Dent station, so come along and check it out!![]()