what’s a red flag on a product landing page site?

Ogaga John
16 replies

Replies

Olivia Rose Thompson
Definitely a lack of legal info and being unclear about the company behind the site. Also stock photos, vague/exaggerated claims with no proof, poor/buggy site design, and aggressive pop-ups are red flags for me. Legit companies are transparent, have real testimonials, and respect the user experience.
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Love Ricci
Very good stack here :) I Personally leave when there is no Google sign-in. C'mon make it 😹😹😹
Cedric Jude Hawthorne
Definitely a lack of company info, address, privacy policy, terms of service, etc. Also watch out for no pricing details, fake testimonials, low-quality or stock images, and overblown claims/hype. Those are major red flags for me too.
Ethan Cole Blackwood
Definitely lack of company info (address, legal name etc). Also no pictures of the actual team/founders. Stock photos everywhere is a red flag too. And if they make insane promises or guarantees that seem too good to be true, run away!
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Charlotte Elise Sinclair
Totally! Red flags for me are no pricing page, no info on the founding team, and shoddy/spammy-looking site design. Makes me think it's probably a scam or will be a headache to deal with if anything goes wrong. Always check for About/Team, Pricing, Privacy/Terms pages at a minimum before signing up for anything.
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Ogaga John
@charlotteelisesinclair I have an ideology. If it looks spammy, then it is definitely spammy. It is better to be safe than sorry
Isabella Claire Anderson
Lack of contact info is definitely a red flag. Also look out for overly sensational or hyperbolic claims, lack of specifics on how the product actually works, no social proof or credible testimonials, and an overall spammy or sketchy vibe to the site design. Legit products usually have professional sites that clearly explain the product and company.
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Karl Mechkin
For me is the lack of legal information about the company, such as name, where is it incorporated, etc., which sometimes is not even included in the privacy policy and terms of service, so it is not clear with whom you have to enter such user agreements.
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Julian Lloyd
Overpromising with phrases like best ever or guaranteed results. Makes me skeptical immediately.
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Ogaga John
@julian_lloyd So be authentic with choice of words .. Hmm Nice
Ariel Benson
Fake looking testimonials or stock photos. Authenticity is key, and this just feels shady.
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Ogaga John
@ariel_benson Very true, personally this icks me when I see landing pages like this
Max Webster
No clear call to action. If I can't tell what to do next, I’m probably not going to stick around.
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Keira Stump
There are way too many buzzwords being thrown around without a clear explanation of what the product actually does. It just feels really vague and unhelpful.
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Nora Green
Poor design or layout. If the page looks unprofessional, I’m less likely to trust the product.
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Deniz B.
For me, lately it's been "AI" - unfortunately. AI has many useful applications, but ever since people started marketing simple algorithms or wrappers for large language models as if they were their own artificial intelligence models, I've begun to hesitate the moment I see the term "AI" on a website.
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