For Immediate Release:
Earth, October 1st, 2020 – ToolGuyd, an industry-leading online tool review and news publication is proud to announce that we have won a Best Tool Review Blog on the Planet award. Again! The judges recognized the quality and integrity of our content and coverage, and we are deeply honored to win this award.
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Disclosure: We paid an entry fee (in chocolate). The judges cannot read yet, but we explained why we should win, and they agreed. No other companies paid to enter for an award in this category.
In All Seriousness…
Read More About Pay to Play Product Awards
Look, I get it, paid-entry awards programs pay the bills for the organizations that run them. That’s their business. To each their own.
What really grinds my gears are the press releases that skew everything out of proportion, when brands start slapping award notices into new tool press releases and announcements, or boast on social media without disclosing the context and payments behind whatever accolades they claim to have won.
“Breaking News: Brand X products win 4 industry awards!” Oh really?
Other emails might read: “Our products won tool awards! Will you review or feature them on your website now that we have an award under our belt?”
Here at ToolGuyd we keep up to date with new tool developments and launches. And so when I receive press releases or emails boasting about tool awards, and I see awards for products that didn’t see any new competition in the award year, it raises a skeptical eyebrow.
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Here are questions to ask when you see the same on social media or product pages:
Did the brand pay for consideration?
What was the criteria for winning?
How many competing products were in the running for each award?
Was the product even tested?
The pattern repeats every year. We’ll receive a press release from a power tool brand, boasting about the awards their products won for this year. I’ll ask them this list of questions, and after some back and forth they’ll usually say: “Some [of the tools we received awards for] just hit the market and have not been tested yet.”
I previously asked a different brand about one of their “tool award-winning” products. That particular hand tool was never produced and never reached the market. They told me: “To answer your question, no, this product has never existed.” So how did it win an award?
A journalist doesn’t win a Pulitzer based on headlines alone. Actors and actresses do not win Oscars for movies that have not yet been filmed.
In some cases, unreleased products can still be tested for award consideration. But if there’s no transparency, there’s no way to tell. A brand might slap a big award logo in a press release, their website, or Instagram, but what is the award actually for if it appears that not even prototypes were tested?
How many awards are given for one-runner races? And if the runner isn’t even ready to race, how do they still win first place?
Even one home improvement retailer started giving out their own “Innovation Awards.”
The winning products are recognized for delivering unique innovation, value and efficiency across multiple home improvement categories. [Redacted] is appreciative of and proud to celebrate the work that our vendor partners put in year over year. Along with the new Innovation Award comes the introduction of the Innovation Award Seal, designed to make it easy for customers to identify and shop our best-in-class products.
How does that work? Did all of the retailer’s partners and suppliers submit tools for consideration?
Transparency is important. As tool users, we should demand it. Otherwise, how do we know which awards are earned and which are just thinly veiled advertising?
Many industry product awards have registration fees, some of them considerably high. While some have juries of industry experts that adjudicate the awards, many don’t seem to have any sort of peer review process by which product design or innovation awards can be validated.
Did Brand X receive an award for best Thingamajig because there were no other new Thingamajigs this year, or no new Thingamajigs that paid to enter? Did Brand Y win an award for “Best Red Thingamajig” and Brand Z for “Best Green Thingamajig” so that they each could each take home “honors” and be encouraged to pay again for future consideration?
This is why transparency is so important.
Luckily, as tool and product users, we have the ability to ask questions, and it’s easier than ever. Brands love when their users engage with them via social media. So why not ask them for more information?
Did the brand pay for consideration?
What was the criteria for winning?
How many competing products were in the running for each award?
Was the product even tested?
I’ve started asking these questions whenever I receive a press releases about industry awards.
The typical answers that I’ve received to the last two questions are the ones that frustrate and disappoint me most. How many competing products were in the running for the award? We don’t know. What does an award mean if it’s a one-player race?
Was the product even tested? Sometimes the answer is yes, other times no. So what’s being judged, a one-page sell sheet? An advertisement? What does an award mean if a production sample wasn’t even tested?
Maybe our questions could be simplified. When brands boast about the awards their products won, maybe this is what we’re going to start asking: Are you the only brand to pay to enter a product in this category, and was the actual product tested?
(This post was first published in September 2019 and slightly modified and republished for 2020.)
csroc
congrats, I want chocolate too!
Scott K
I completely agree. My mind was blow when I learned about the cost of entry to JD Power awards about a decade ago. I his rly care much more about the brand’s reputation, cost, and reviews from sites like yours and ToolBoxBuzz. I don’t believe an award has ever factored into my purchasing decisions. Keep up the great work and congrats on the award!
Jeff @ Tool Box Buzz
Thanks for reading Tool Box Buzz! We appreciate it. I love reading Stuart (and Ben’s) stuff too.
Mosh
Thanks!
Keep up your gr8 work..
Highly appreciated….
James C
This brings to mind a site that does tool “reviews” and seems to never give something less than about 3.5 stars. Hmmm.
Yadda
Great article!
Frank D
The number one thing that irks me about one other particular site, is that they absolutely refuse to come clean and call things for what they … but no … every week or day … “ reviews “ grt posted that are absolutely nothing more than a straight PR copy paste, verbatum, text and stock photography provided by the manufacturer. And, I still cannot wrap my head around the fact they continue to call these posts a PRODUCT REVIEW. It simply does not compute in my brain. Call it industry news, call it something … but don’t call it a REVIEW.
Corey Moore
That sounds Craze-y!
Jeff
I also enjoy reading this website. The controversial ones just piss me off as do the Instagram argue-reviews. But I find the stuff here super helpful.
MichaelHammer
I will absolutely award you for chocolate. Seriously, the Italian ladies that bring me in and feed me at lunch always get me to do extra work for free.
I never really pay attention to those awards. Editor’s choice awards get my attention, but even then, I take it with a grain of salt. Even you, Stuart, I love your reviews, they are thorough and unbiased, but you’re not in the trades, so I weigh that when I read your reviews. When I read A Concord Carpenter’s review, it has more weight to me because he reviews from a professional’s prospective.
I love what you do and appreciate it deeply. Thank you for staying the course and keep up the great work.
JoeM
Honestly… I don’t care if you win the award or not… That we’re still devoted to your reviews and guidance on tools should tell you all you need to know about whether you’re “The Best” at what you do.
You’ve won our deep respect, and gratitude. And MANY of us aren’t even in the same country as you. That’s a pretty global reach, and worthy of calling it a Global Impact. If there was a GoFund Me site for funding something you were improving at home, I’m sure there’s enough of us here to fund it, even at donations of $5-$10 each. If one of the readers wants to set up a GoFundMe for an actual PRIZE for you, the same applies. What matters is you help people, and you do a great job of it. If it means we have to monetize our presence on your site in order to keep the lights on, I’m sure there are ways we can do that. And being that we’re also the Audience you’re writing for… You don’t have to change anything, we’re paying for you to do what you always did. I, personally, think that acknowledgement for doing your job should be reward enough. If we’re not appreciating you like you deserve, then that’s a flaw on us, not you.
Calvin
Love what you guys are doing. Congrats and keep up the good work.
Matt J.
I can read and will gladly accept payment in chocolate…where do I sign up for this awards panel?
Jeff @ Tool Box Buzz
I almost blew a gasket when one of the brands printed that award on the retail box. That pay to play stuff grinds my gears but more so when it isn’t transparent.
Paul E Hacker
congrats .. great work as always look forward to your continued effort ..