Reviews are a huge FREE value added benefit that is responsible for driving up product sales. Think Amazon, AirBnB, B&H Photo, *any* computer manufacturer. Perb is no different. A girl with a good assortment of reviews will discover their phone will ring off the hook, and they get to raise their prices according to normal supply and demand rules. Just like how parking meter rates are set.
The Perb engine used - "vBulletin", really is an insult to the current state of the art that the above mentioned social media-centric entities. Toss this ancient BBS 1990's technology that clearly has not kept up with the times. Sure it has a few nice features that Facebook, Twitter and such do not have, but the 80% of the feature set the aforementioned have is entirely missing from the vBulletin engine.
Forms in the 'old' sense are restrictive and annoying. Ask any girl trying to advertise on LL how excruciating the process of posting an ad on that site is. Get a survey and ask Perb readers how much fun they find Searching Perb is. Ask most girls who cringe at reviewers who publish too-intimate YMMV details that readers who think that regardless of who they are, should get the same service. If there was a real-time grammarly approach to noticing the typical abbreviations used, and it accumulated this into a "form" design to allow readers to efficiently filter in/out messages to zero in on what they are looking for, this would be great for both free-form writers who would be rewarded with such posts and readers who don't have to wade through so much garbage.
Hire a couple of UX and UI person and an analytics specialist to help design a replacement from the ground up. Do NOT use a canned solution that is fine for the IT crowd but is much hated by folks used to contemporary social media offerings.
Going by what multiple vendors do, it seems that the 5-point start rating system is the most widely used 'quick' rating system that heads up a review. News sites that use a commenting engine that posts to Facebook are nice, they allow up and down voting and sub-replies to threads that are collapsed by default.
Comments should not be removed willy-nilly as they currently are from Perb except for the rather subjective "community standards" AND the poster is notified. Right now a lot of posts are manually removed, the writer may get put into "Perbatory" and their sins otherwise detailed. Posts that are inappropriate need to be flagged automatically right from the beginning by an automated system that catches 90% of the garbage. One example is if a user is using multiple handles and the same IP, a properly designed automated system would instantly catch that crap and deal with it instantly.
In Facebook or Amazon land, if a "shill" review appeared it would be downvoted and comments allowed to comment as such. Others who didn't agree with the shill and would upvote the review and add comments. Obviously if a reviewer has only one post and it is a glowing review of a previously unknown girl, the system would automatically provide a score to help readers more quickly evaluate the veracity of the information and upvote, downvote without commenting. A blocking feature would allow readers to hide such reviews and see how many others also blocked the subject girl and the writer to further improve the ability of the reader to assess the quality of the information -- all done automatically.
What would be ideal is a marraige of Facebook, Craigslist, Amazon reviews, twitter, and a per-person revenue-generation site such as OnlyFans. Get rid of stupid LeoList and the ugly ancient vBulletin-based Perb forum, the ridiculous Cuddleup site, pretentious elitist brochure sites such as Tryst, and create a customized integrated system. Collectively, these sites bring in enough cash to warrant the development cost.
Just make a hate list of the current system rather than suggesting any more kludges that will justify it's continued existance. That's what surveys are for.
40-message limit on private messages? Make that go away. Sooo stupid.
Colored text editing? Toast it. *NO* other contemporary social media allows readers to be subjected to this visual pollution created by the clueless.
Auto-quoted responses consuming vast amounts of vertical scrolling space. Imagine if Facebook allowed this.
Page navigation for single threads where you have to manually search each "page" for text? Yuck. Make it go away.
Waiting 15 seconds before you can perform another search? What moron designed THAT?
Number of posts beside each person's name, great, keep that. The rest of the details I would expecte to see if I *choose* to view that person's home page like Facebook.
Disallowing "unpaid" girls the ability to post? That is rude, greedy and requires hiring enforcers to manually read all messages and slap violator's wrists and invent a condescending "Perbatory".
Posts deleted by moderators with zero notification to the author as to why in most cases.
Blocking any links to a few competitors such as Tryst, what a childish way to deal with competition to protectd your own income stream. Thing of better ways to generate cash.
RED for paying advertisers and dire consequences for any others violating rules, all MANUALLY managed and time take to berated each violator individually? Begone with that.
Forms are fine, but the second you force someone to spend more time on a contribution just to follow a desired format can result in stifling less verbose contributors. The shills can and will take over as they have the time and financial motivation to do so.
Authors have profiles on vBulletin but they are empty, unlike the Facebook and every other social media approach.
If the system was Facebook and social media aware, a review would be as simple as sharing a providers ad and prefacing it with relevent commentary. It would be "liked" with various types, not simply have an an accumulation of views. Shares (Facebook) or Retweets (Twitter) would be the norm. Allowing quoting and the
When you have a system that monetizes certain social media features and punishes the violators for not reading the rules that flies in the face of current conventions on how people interact on these systems, this is when the operators need to take a serious look at how the fundamentals of what needs to be achieved and what technology best suites that.
For example, girls (only girls, by the way) pay to get "red" status. They are expected to magically "know" they cannot reply to guy's reviews on them if they are not paid and have their login colored red.
Even the more colorful and impactful reviewers miss basics such as non-subjective information such as price, height, weight. What normally happens is other readers pipe up and fill in the gaps. Such threads need to be mined for relevant information and that consolidated for each girl to make life SOOOO much easier for readers.
Artificial verbal restrictions such as not posting photos of girls (because the site is pay-for-girls and that is viewed as free advertising), that is annoying for readers who know some girls with the highest value may not have a lot if wherewithall or cash to post their skills; it is the readers and consumers that provide the highest value to such a review site. In the YouTube world these people are referred to as influencers. There are plenty of models out there to mine to best determine an approach to take to build a brand value (talking about "Perb" as a brand).