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SuperPages.com review: The Truth About SuperPages.com 4

I
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8:35 pm EDT
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I have read many reviews of Idearc/Superpages.com from many angry customers that feel that have been ripped off,
but have not really read any solid explanations of why Idearc/Superpages.com is a rip off.

My name is Lisa, I work for the company in Everett, WA and have done the research to know why. It is my hope that by divulging
the truth someone will be able to use the information to take action against this company. I've made a lot
of money selling worthless advertising and this is my attempt to make it right.

First off, it's important to know that Idearc/Superpages.com employs a very specific sales tactic that they
refer to as "Salesology." This is the very basis of all training and as an employee of the company, if you do
not follow this method, you will be repromanded. Salesology is taught to all employees by Jay Hughes
(www.salesologyonline.com). Utilizing this sales method, most customers don't even realize that they just purchased
advertising. Here's how it works:

1) A Business receives a cold call and they are asked if it's "a bad time."
2) Rep tells them that "We have people in your area looking for (fill in blank) in your area, are you
currently taking on more work/new customers?"
3) Then we ask how much more work they can handle and how much they make per job. Multiply the amount of work by
the profit per job and that's their gap. Let's say an Electrical Contractor averages $500 per job and can take on
10 more of those per month. "So, if I were able to help you close that $5000 gap per month in your business,
would it be fair to ask for $500 on the back-end in return?"
4) Customer says "of course."
5) Almost no explanation is given on how we are going to get them this promised work. We get GTI
(General telemarketing international) on the phone who records the customer agreeing to a 12-month
contract. They are told we're doing this "To enter them into our database." Most people have no idea
what just happened, but this is 100% legally binding. Our only goal is to get them through GTI.

In the initial training, they state we're to find the gaps in small to medium sized businesses and help
them grow. The funny thing is that no matter what state their business is in, no matter what they sell, how
much they make per sale...it's all the same. The soloution to every business is a minimum $500/month program to
meet their objectives. They don't really encourage anyone to sell over a $500/month plan because that
requires a signed contract in lieu of a GTI recording. If you sell less than $500 you're scoffed at, even if the
business doesn't need it.

So, what does a business get for $500/month? We are told to tell businesses that we are selling "SuperLeads."
However, these are nothing more than clicks with a theoretical conversion rate. Their collateral even shows how
this works. So, for $500 worth of SuperLeads a business will get 125 clicks with the minimum of $4/click (some
categories are more). They state that, on average, for every 5 clicks, a customer will actually make a call
to the business. $500 should then relate to 25 calls in a month. Again, this is how we are trained and this
is what the collateral we can send out states.

If the above actually worked, then it wouldn't be a bad deal. However, most businesses will not get any calls
for their $500 per month. Why? Most (at least 90%) of these clicks aren't even from SuperPages.com, Google, Yahoo
or anything you've ever heard of. They are from obscure partner sites that pull out a single keyword from the
business and get the needed clicks to bill out $500. As an example, let's say a kitchen contractor installs sinks.
Let's say someone googles "sink holes." A few wrong clicks and the contractor is out $4. Again, at least 90%
of these clicks have nothing to do with what a business does. The customer doesn't have any access to
these click reports, and there are no audits done to ensure it's actually working at all. The fact is that
most sales are made to oversaturated markets where businesses will not get any return on their
investments. We can sell to the same type of business in the same cities as much as we want and tell everyone
"we have people looking for your services." In all actuality, Superpgaes.com gets little traffic, and if a business
gets even one call per month for $500 they are doing better than average.

Next, is there click fraud going on? (i.e. the company clicking on it's own ads to turn a profit.) I'm not 100%
sure here. We used to be able to see the IP addresses that were clicking on the ads, but not any more.
In the past, I did random sample searches to cross reference the IP addresses by location and a large amount
of the IP addresses were not even in the same state as the busnisses. Many of these IP addresses seemed to
track back to where Idearc has physical offices. I have asked many times if I click on someone's ad from work, will
they be charged a click and have always been told no. I'm not so sure about that.

We also sell postcard mailers. When these came out I was excited to sell something that actually works. We are
told to tell customers they can expect a 0.5% - 2.0% return of them. I've heard of a few businesses getting
work from these, but I also know of businesses that have sent out 10, 000 cards (at $5000) with zero return.
The artwork on these is generally poor, as they have the sales reps do the basic design and ad copy for
them with very little training. It's mostly a joke to see just how bad they come out. Many contractors have
actually gotten in trouble from the State because License numbers have to be on their ads. This also is not
audited.

If you are a victim of Idearc and ICare won't make it right, you may want to call my Manager, Joe D., at
[protected]. If he won't help you, call his Boss, Dan C., at [protected]. Hopefully, they will let you
out of your contract.

Good Luck!

Resolved

The complaint has been investigated and resolved to the customer’s satisfaction.

4 comments
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R
R
Ripped off in Dallas by Cleannet
Mesquite, US
Jan 12, 2010 6:58 am EST

Wow, that is a real help.

H
H
http://newjerseymoldtest.com/
Elizabeth, US
Feb 16, 2010 10:34 pm EST

I’ve seen exactly what you are talking about, in the first super pages campaign i ran 2 years ago our ads were placed on hundreds of these obscure sites under keywords that have nothing to do what so ever with our business. We are a mold remediation company and we were getting dozens of clicks for carpet dying from all over the country and we are located in New Jersey.

I canceled supers pages, accused them of fraud and they settled with me by giving us half page ads in 4 yellow page books which generated one sale in a year.

I recently placed a new ad on super pages to see what would happen. Its only showing n a limited area of New Jersey and no one has called my office at all from its exposure. They claim it has 3019 impressions coming from 3 key words for 2 week period.

The same period of advertising on Google using over 200 key words for the entire state of New jersey produced 2700 impressions with 21 web site visits that are verified thru our analytics program. This campaign produced a profit although not as much as our organic Google campaign.

Super pages is full of ###. There is no way that 3 key words concerning mold remediation in just Jersey City, New Jersey could have produced this much traffic. Furthermore where are the web site visits ! We can track every visit to our site and no one has visited thru super pages at all.

They could have a great product because in theory when someone logs onto super pages they are a buyer, they want a service, there not just surfing around for information. It should be a much better potential customer than Google delivers because let’s face it you get allot of wasted clicks on Google from folks that want say a mole tested as opposed to a mold test.

It’s a shame that Idearc engages in this type of activity. If you read thru their 3 agreements, 2 of which are not directly posted on the area that you initial when you sign up, they do state that they can and will place you add on these content sites. So by hiding behind there obscure multipage online contracts they have an out.
The only think is where are the site visits, where are the phone calls. They sadly don’t exist.
My mother told me that you can’t trust Texans and super pages has gone steady downhill since Idearac took them over.

I’m calling Idearc tomorrow, canceling my account and suing them in small claims court. I am accusing them of fraud and I’m going to subpoena there records.

Beware of Superpages your going to flush your money down the toilet.

http://newjerseymoldtest.com/

I
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Idearc
Middleton, US
Feb 19, 2010 9:54 am EST

We are never pleased when one of our clients is unhappy. Please give me the opportunity to review your issue. I promise someone will get back to you within 48 hours with an update. Please provide me with the following information and email back to me at: customerservice@Idearc.com

Your Full Name and Title:

Business Name:

Business Telephone Number:

State in which your Business resides:

Your Contact Number:

Best time to call you:

E-mail address:

Brief Complaint Description:

R
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rexs
Las Vegas, US
Mar 22, 2010 2:03 pm EDT

I am sorry that you are not happy with super pages. I was looking on line and found a website called seekshallfind.com. On this our business can have a free ebillboard. I was talking to my friend Mike that has a ebillboard he said he like his ebillboard. I hope this can help you.

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