Online reviews are quite important when it comes to making the right buying decision. It's a fact that 90% of consumers go through online reviews before coming in contact with the business. Around 88% of consumers trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations. The online review has more influence on buying decisions than personal recommendations. I've gota product suggestion from a friend about the Harley Davidson exhaust, which he suggested to shop online. But after going through several reviews, I've found a nearby store with many positive ones and shopped from there.
When making buying decisions, I generally value personal recommendations over online reviews because they come from people I trust and can ask detailed questions. However, there was a time when I was looking for a new digital signage provider and didn't have any direct contacts in that space. In this case, I relied heavily on online reviews and case studies to gauge reliability and customer satisfaction. One provider stood out with consistently positive feedback and detailed client success stories, which gave me confidence to move forward. After onboarding, I later received a personal recommendation from a colleague who confirmed the provider's quality, reinforcing my decision. This experience taught me that while personal recommendations are ideal, well-researched online reviews can be just as valuable—especially when entering new markets or industries where you don't have a network. It's about combining both sources to make a more informed choice.
I tend to begin by reading reviews on the web because they provide a general overview quickly, particularly when I'm not familiar with a brand or a product. However, if a friend or a family member gives a very positive personal endorsement, that usually sways the decision. For instance, I searched for a noise-cancelling headset and consulted a lot of reviews on the net. They were mostly positive reviews, but I was not convinced. Later a friend described to me how good hers performed on flights as well as on focus time. The personal experience did it for me. I purchased the same headset—she was right. In this situation, the actual experience seemed more credible than a score of reviews from strangers.
I've always found that both online reviews and personal recommendations have their place in the decision-making process, but they serve different purposes in my buying journey. Reviews give you breadth—you can quickly see patterns across hundreds of experiences. But recommendations provide depth and context that's impossible to get from a five-star system. This was especially evident when I was running my eCommerce board game business. We desperately needed a new 3PL partner after outgrowing our previous one. The reviews for one particular fulfillment center looked stellar online—fast shipping times, accurate picking rates, the works. But something didn't feel right about the fit. That's when a fellow entrepreneur in my network shared their first-hand experience with a smaller, regional 3PL that wasn't as visible in search results. They walked me through exactly how this partner had handled their seasonal spikes and inventory challenges—issues that perfectly mirrored our own situation. Despite the fewer online reviews, we took the leap based on that personal recommendation, and it transformed our operations. The 3PL understood our business in ways that the more "famous" providers couldn't. This experience shaped how we approach partnerships at Fulfill.com today. We combine hard data with the human element—because sometimes the perfect fulfillment partner for your specific needs isn't the one with the most reviews, but the one that other similar businesses swear by. When stakes are high, I'll take one detailed recommendation from someone who understands my specific challenges over a hundred generic five-star reviews any day.