I agree here with Monkeylove who put it quite nicely. It all depends on customer source. I found walk-ins and word-of-mouth customers to frequent our spa most. Although we have a web site, it is very discreet and there are no pictures of girls on it. It seems that internet does not do much for us whether a review is good or not. The owner/s also do/does not participate here on the board to either promote or simply be present on massageplanet.net.
Nevertheless, we are relatively busy due to a high concentration of MPs in the overall area. Clients circulate, browse, do window shopping, talk, and refer others- so there is really no urgent need to let everyone know from massageplanet.net that we exist. My suspicion would be that -in fact- massageplanet.net clients are not the majority of customers we see. Neither they were when I worked at RHill or Markham in the past regardless the fact that there were beautiful girls working there and we were very busy! Hardly any of them were mentioned here on the board. Maybe because we played by the "by-law rules", so there was nothing to talk about graphically? Or maybe we saw only shy lurkers? Hard to tell...
Anyhow, when I used to work in this one place, I was reviewed a few times. Did my business go up? Not really, since I was already busy. The only difference I noticed was seeing a lot of "youngsters" walking in, asking for me and inquiring about more than regular 'rub and tug' activities. It was very irritating since it could have brought a negative attention to the place and animosity among girls. It also shows that some people believe in everything they read.
Have you ever wondered how come Blue Lagoon or Alpha Care is not so favourably mentioned here on the board- yet they can afford having from 5 to 8 girls per shift? Does massageplanet.net cause them a big harm? I doubt it. However, I could see how some places, which rely heavily on internet customer base, observe changes in the business contingent upon reviews. Generally, different establishments target different customer populations or try to draw from various sources. Thus, my message to take home is: what you learn here is just a tip of an iceberg - so to speak...