Method 1. Detective
Turn on Sherlock Holmes: type the agency name or freelancer's name into a search engine and enjoy. Any information can pop up: a story of a deceived client, a bad recommendation, inclusion in a blacklist, etc.
If there is a lot of negativity and it comes from disinterested people (that is, it is not the machinations of competitors, but a cry from the heart of deceived customers, oppressed employees, etc.), it is better to avoid such a contractor.
It is difficult to distinguish paid reviews from real ones, but it is possible. As a rule, paid reviews do not have specifics: everything is bad, bad, bad, and what is bad is unclear. Real people, as a rule, describe all the details of what is happening. Also, fake reviews are characterized by excessive emotionality: the poor contractor should go to jail, not provide services. In addition, they can be written on the same day on different resources and under a carbon copy: especially persistent Sherlocks malta consumer email list can check the text for uniqueness.
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Advice: if you do find controversial information or negative reviews, see how the contractor reacts to negativity. If he is rude, sarcastic, starts blaming in response - this is quite toxic. A professional will try to bring a dissatisfied client to a positive or at least neutral communication and solve th
Sherlock knows something!
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