👥 Real people, never bots • 👍 Positive recommendations • ✍️ Written reason on each • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill
👍 They almost picked you, then they opened your Recommendations
Someone found your Page. They liked the cover photo, scrolled a couple of posts, and their thumb was hovering over the message button. Then they did the thing every careful buyer does at the last second: they opened the Recommendations tab to see whether other people vouch for you. It was blank. Maybe one recommendation from last year sat there alone. That empty space answered the question they were really asking, which was “is this business safe to trust”, and the answer looked like no. So they backed out and messaged the competitor whose tab was full of people saying yes. You did the hard work of getting found. You lost them at the final glance.
How Facebook proof works now, and why it still closes the sale
Facebook scrapped its old five star rating back in 2018. Pages do not collect stars anymore; they collect Recommendations. A visitor is asked one plain question, “do you recommend this Page”, answers yes or no, and adds a short written line about why. Facebook then rolls those yes answers into the recommendation score shown near the top of your Page. That Recommendations tab is your proof panel. When a stranger is deciding whether to hand you their money or their message, a run of real people recommending you settles it in seconds. It is the gap between “an established place other people chose” and “who even is this”. On Facebook, recommendations are not a footnote to your reputation. They are the moment a browser turns into a buyer.
Why Page owners fill their Recommendations tab
The reasons are practical and they all lead back to trust at the point of decision. A fresh Page opens with an empty tab, and empty reads as untested, so owners give it real voices rather than wait months for a happy customer to think of leaving one on their own. Others are tired of looking unproven next to rivals whose Pages are stacked with positive recommendations, because when a buyer weighs two options, the one people vouched for wins. Some have a launch, an ad push, or a busy season on the way and want the Page to already look chosen before that traffic lands. The aim never changes: stop losing ready buyers at the last check.
🛡️ The honest questions people ask before ordering
Two worries come up, and both deserve a straight answer. The first is whether it will look genuine. It does, because these are real people on real Facebook accounts choosing yes and attaching a short reason in their own words, so each one reads like a person and not a bare thumbs up. The second is whether it actually earns you anything. A full Recommendations tab removes the hesitation that stalls a ready buyer, which is exactly what a thin Page is missing. What it will not do is paper over a service people dislike; genuine goodwill still has to be earned by what you deliver. Recommendations open the door. What is behind it is on you.
Real people, and a Page that stays safe
Almost every bad story about bought proof traces back to bots: junk profiles that read as spam, add nothing, and get swept away. We leave those out entirely. What you get are real accounts leaving honest positive recommendations that sit naturally in your tab, the same kind of account a happy customer would use. We only ever need your Page link, never your login, so your account controls stay yours alone. And a lifetime refill stands behind every order: the recommendations you paid for are yours to keep, and if any ever slip below that, we put them back free for as long as the Page is yours.
Frequently Asked Questions
Not the old way. Facebook removed the one to five star system users could set back in 2018 and replaced it with Recommendations, a plain yes or no answer to whether you would recommend a Page. A page still shows an overall recommendation score built from those yes answers, so positive recommendations are what feeds it now, not stars people pick by hand.
It is a real person publicly answering yes to the question “do you recommend this Page”, usually with a short written line explaining why. It lands in your Recommendations tab, the section people open to see what others think. Since 2018 this has been the main way anyone vouches for a business on Facebook.
Yes. Each one is left by a genuine Facebook account, the same kind of profile a real customer would use, never a bot or an empty shell. That is what makes them read as honest goodwill rather than obvious padding sitting in your tab.
Yes. Each one carries a brief note in the person’s own words, which suits how Facebook works, since it asks for a line of text with the recommendation and expects at least a short sentence. That keeps the tab reading like real customers explaining why they liked you.
They are built to read as real because they come from genuine accounts and carry short, plain reasons written differently each time, not repeated robotic lines. A visitor simply sees people recommending your Page. The goal is a tab that looks like real customers left it, which is exactly what happened.
In the Recommendations tab, found beneath your cover photo, the same place older Pages called Reviews. It is the section a visitor opens to check what others said before trusting you, and it is usually the last stop before they message or buy, which is why filling it matters.
No, never. All we need is the link to your public Page. Real people visit the Page and leave their recommendation exactly as a customer would, so no sign in ever happens and none of your account settings are touched at any point.
Yes. Because the recommendations come from real accounts and not bots, they belong in your tab and read as genuine goodwill, so Facebook has no reason to treat them as spam. We also never touch your login. In plain terms it sits on the platform rules side of things, well clear of anything legal.
They begin arriving soon after you order, then land at a natural, steady pace rather than all at once. A few come through the same day, and a larger pack spreads over a day or two so the tab grows the way a real one would. Each option shows its own timeframe before you buy.
Yes, the recommendations you buy are yours to keep. Every order is backed by a lifetime refill, so if any ever slip below what you paid for, we add them back free for as long as you own the Page. It is a one time purchase we protect for life, not a subscription that bills again.
Enough that the tab no longer looks empty or untested to a first time visitor. A handful lifts a brand new Page past that awkward blank stage, while a Page in a competitive niche often wants more to match the rivals a buyer is comparing it against side by side.



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