In this case your products will have less reviews , just check it out how many reviews each product has in the original English language. The quantity is too small. The more reviews your product has the higher possibility for it to be sold.I would like to suggest to import reviews with a language filter. I need my reviews to be in English but I don't want to translate reviews because the translation not always works as expected.
Note: I'm using Woo plugin.
Seriously? Who is going to pay for that? Just do what I do and delete the text of the entire review with the ones that have crap, unintelligable translations and replace it with something quick and easy like "Great! love it "Well, you can hire a professional copywriter or translator for this stuff. You can't trust a machine to do this.
Yep. Simple as that. No dramas.Import all to draft and then go through them one by one.
Approve all that are good to go.
Select some with spelling mistakes, like @Direct Webstore suggests.
Then delete the garbage.
Why do you think your store's reputation is based on how grammatically correct reviews are? The "store" did not write them. Customers did.You shouldn't save money on reviews. As it's pretty much your face and your reputation
That's the opposite of the popular opinion that 80% of the world's population ARE stupid and/or lazy minded. The evidence is served up daily, everywhere. And smart people take advantage of that ... especially marketeers. This has been well known since the phrase "There's a sucker born every minute" was invented decades ago.People aren't stupid
That would be the remaining 20% who keep the world turning. Just joking.they'll see immediately a badly written one
You'd have to belong to the 80% group to hire "professional writers" to write something as simple as reviews. Hire them to write blogs instead. THAT would add much more value to your store.Hire only professional writers.
It's not like every review is "complete" crap. Many with bad English are still perfectly readable and understandable. Just leave those. It actually looks more real. The entire internet is full of garbled terrible English. No one will really think anything of it.
Just look at Facebook posts or even this forum to see plenty of semi illiterate, badly spelt English with terrible grammar. Besides, you have to give all the keyboard warrior grammar nazis something to bitch about. lol
If I saw a site where every review had 100% perfect English, I would be suspicious. People are aware of fake reviews these days. Don't make them suspicious. Keep it natural. Keep it real. And to do that, you need a bit of imperfection.
If this U.S based site is really popular with students, it may partly explain the high ignorance and illiteracy levels of the average American. Many of whom, write badly written reviews full of grammar and spelling mistakes. lolHere's a good place, for instance https://domyessayright.com/
Why do you think your store's reputation is based on how grammatically correct reviews are? The "store" did not write them. Customers did.
You're basically saying that when a customer reads a badly worded or spelled review, that they think ... "Wow! This review, (which was written by a customer) has so many spelling and grammar mistakes, that this store must be very low class and have a very low reputation". If that was the case, Amazon would be out of business. Logic score 0/10
That's the opposite of the popular opinion that 80% of the world's population ARE stupid and/or lazy minded. The evidence is served up daily, everywhere. And smart people take advantage of that ... especially marketeers. This has been well known since the phrase "There's a sucker born every minute" was invented decades ago.
That would be the remaining 20% who keep the world turning. Just joking.
You'd have to belong to the 80% group to hire "professional writers" to write something as simple as reviews. Hire them to write blogs instead. THAT would add much more value to your store.
If the reviews are TOO well written, with 100% correct spelling and grammar, THEN some people would be suspicious. It's just not natural. "Normal" and "Real" reviews are usually FULL of mistakes and lazy writing. You see it every day. "Fake" reviews are often the very well written ones with no mistakes. Using professional writers has the very real potential of having the opposite effect you are seeking. The whole site would scream "FAKE!"
Like I said already ...
If this U.S based site is really popular with students, it may partly explain the high ignorance and illiteracy levels of the average American. Many of whom, write badly written reviews full of grammar and spelling mistakes. lol
Disclaimer: "This post is just the opinion of me and others" (I've Googled and researched this). If it differs from other's opinions, meltdowns are unnecessary.
That as well. It was more or less presumed if using a "professional writer". Too good = fake. I want some reviews to be less than perfect. I even have a scattering of negative ones, just to add to the "realness". But that's just my opinion. Don't worry about it conflicting with yours ... the more viewpoints the merrier.I meant stylistic qualities of texts.
Especially to someone involved in website development who is not being objective.But often it's extremely obvious that a review is fake with a single glance.
That's a good idea indeed. I even have a scattering of negative ones, just to add to the "realness".
Alas, many people use different applications for proper writing, and it is already more difficult to determine whether it is false or not.I appreciate your answering. But I didn't meant the grammar or spelling here at all. I meant stylistic qualities of texts.
I guess the only type of people which can't tell the difference between genuinely written review and fake one are store owners. That has something to do with psychology probably. But often it's extremely obvious that a review is fake with a single glance.
And it takes talent, natural stylistic sense or experience to write a simple review