Friday, January 11, 2013

Don't Let Your Reputation?or Your Wallet?Fall Prey to Scam ...

A Web site of suspicious origin is misusing the REALTOR? trademark in what seems to be an attempt to get money from real estate practitioners.

The site, Realtor-complaints.com, supposedly publishes consumer complaints about real estate agents.?However, an investigation by the New Jersey association of REALTORS? showed a string of complaints against its members, all using similar phrasing. ?This leads to suspicion that these are not all public-submitted complaints,? says Lauren Castellano, director of communications for the New Jersey Association of REALTORS?.

Not only that, when agents who have been the subject of a complaint attempt to make contact, the site offers them the ?opportunity? to pay to have the complaint and their name removed from the site, says Michael Thiel, an attorney for the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS?. ?NAR legal staff checked the WHOIS record for the site and discovered it?s hosted on servers located in the Seychelles. ?It?s recorded as having been initially registered on Jan. 1, 2013,? Thiel says, ?which makes the site?s claim of having been around since 2002 very suspect.?

Thiel?s office has received a number of calls from members who?ve been informed, via e-mail, that their name is listed at the site. NAR attorneys are investigating and, if necessary, will take steps to have the site shut down. But it?s important to approach with caution any service that claims to either track or burnish your reputation. ?Online reputation management?and reputation trashing?is a growing enterprise, and there are simple steps?you can take to manage your own reputation online:

  • Make sure all of your profiles (on social media sites, at REALTOR.com, and so on) are complete, up to date, and consistent.
  • Be proactive in asking customers for reviews in legitimate forums, such as Yelp and LinkedIn.
  • Search Google and Yahoo for your name and your company?s name. Save each search as a browser favorite and check them daily.
  • Sign up for Google Alerts so that you?re notified when your name appears in a search. Also set up alerts for variations of your name, your company name, and other keywords.
  • Ask your customers where they?ve gone to search for information about real estate and other professionals.
  • Correct errors quickly. Immediately contact the Web site and be willing to prove your case with information from your MLS or other sources. But don?t be tempted to pay to have information removed. ?It?s hard to imagine a legitimate site requiring you to pay to take down false information,? Thiel says.

Stacey Moncrieff

Stacey has been with the NAR for more 20 years, starting as an associate editor with Real Estate Today magazine, where she covered sales and finance topics. In addition to overseeing the editorial and design for REALTOR? Magazine and the quarterly REALTOR? Association Executive magazine, she manages a variety of e-communications for REALTORS? and REALTOR? association executives.

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Source: http://speakingofrealestate.blogs.realtor.org/2013/01/10/don%E2%80%99t-let-your-reputation%E2%80%94or-your-wallet%E2%80%94fall-prey-to-scam-complaint-site/

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