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How can hospitality deal with blackmail threats over fake reviews?

Sam Morgan of Open Restaurant Group shares how he dealt with scammers threatening his business with fake reviews.

SamMorgan.JPG

A significant proportion of the hospitality industry is made up of small, independent businesses that are reliant on online reviews. But due to limited protections, the sector can become a vulnerable target to blackmailers who are prepared to exploit review sites such as Google and TripAdvisor.

 

Last week, Sam Morgan (pictured above) and chef Andrew Sheridan of Open Restaurant Group (ORG), which includes Black and Green in Worcestershire and Restaurant OXA in the Wirral, revealed they were targeted by criminals who demanded payment of £2,000 to stop them posting fake one-star reviews of ORG’s restaurants online.

 

Morgan applied his ten years’ experience in law enforcement to gather information on the blackmailers. He alerted the press, who subsequently passed on the evidence of the fake reviews to Google. However, it took a week for Google to delete the posts.

 

But it was not an isolated incident and Morgan believes other restaurants are still being threatened with fake reviews.

 

“This is a wider problem,” Morgan says. “There is also a bigger emphasis now on reviews.

 

“The expansion of the market is definitely going to be a reason why [blackmail threats] continue to happen. Until Google and TripAdvisor start to clamp down on such matters, our businesses will always be a victim.”

 

Morgan spoke to The Caterer about his experience dealing with the scammers and shared his tips for fellow restaurateurs and hospitality operators facing the same threat.

 

1. You are not alone

Morgan urged other restaurateurs in the same situation to speak out. “The reason that we wanted to expose [the threats] to the press is that we feel that there needs to be significant change in order to support our industry,” he says.

 

“Organisations such as Google and TripAdvisor have a duty of care in order to protect their customer, because that’s what we are, but I’m not too sure that those organisations fully understand that or respect our position.”

 

2. Whatever you do, don’t pay them

Morgan says operators should not pay the blackmailers. “These extortionists can operate in the way that they do because they have a powerful weapon which can be abused and misused.

 

“If you do pay, it definitely will not go away. The threat will continue to be there, and it will be there every single week.”

 

Not only will those who pay feel trapped in a constant cycle of relief and despair, they might also feel fear or shame for having made the transaction in the first place.

 

3. Reach out to the likes of Google and TripAdvisor

Even though Morgan says Google never communicated with ORG personally – only through the press – he advised hospitality business owners to get in contact with online review sites as soon as possible and push forward even when faced with a “useless” automatic response.

 

He encouraged operators to consider alternatives, including going to the press, if there is no direct response from the review platforms. “Make as much noise as humanly possible. Reach out to whatever publications are ultimately willing to report on it.”

 

4. Report it to Action Fraud

Morgan says it is unlikely for the blackmailers to face penalties under the UK judicial system as a lot of them are believed to be based abroad. “For that reason, there isn’t really an option for the police to follow up on it, but it’s still important to report it to them so that they can gather as much information as possible,” he says. “Make sure that the review platforms are fully aware and report it to [cyber crime experts] Action Fraud.”

 

5. Don’t be disheartened

It can be normal to feel alone when facing similar threats and struggling to get a response from online review sites. However, Morgan advised operators in the same situation to follow his approach. He says he is happy to help other restaurateurs if they need advice on a similar situation.

 

About Open Restaurant Group (ORG)

 

ORG is run by chef Sheridan and his business partners Sam and Emma Morgan.

 

Sheridan’s flagship restaurant 8 By Andrew Sheridan (pictured above) in Liverpool holds three AA Rosettes and is listed in the Michelin Guide Great Britain and Ireland.

 

ORG also runs two bistros, Black & Green in Barnt Green and OXA in Oxton, as well as the Bracebridge pub restaurant in Four Oaks, Sutton Coldfield.

 

The team will also launch Dishes in north Wales on 2 August.

 

 

 

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