How the Grader System Works
Grader.LLC builds review and comparison platforms around a simple idea: people should be able to understand what a rating means, why a grade appears, and which signals matter before making a decision.
A clearer way to turn reviews into useful decision signals.
The Grader system is designed to help visitors move from scattered opinions to cleaner comparisons. Each platform may focus on a different industry, but the core structure stays consistent.
Collect relevant signals
Platforms are built around the information people actually need before choosing a provider, company, school, service, product, destination, or experience.
Moderate review input
User-submitted reviews are held for moderation. Only approved reviews should influence public-facing ratings, grades, rankings, comparisons, and review counts.
Organize category scores
Each platform can break decisions into useful categories, such as support, value, features, transparency, customer experience, safety, or reliability.
Display simple grades
Scores are presented in a format visitors can understand quickly, including star ratings, letter grades, approved review counts, and comparison signals.
What the Grader system is designed to solve
Most review websites give visitors too much noise and not enough clarity. People see star ratings, scattered comments, sponsored lists, and comparison tables, but they still have to guess what matters.
The Grader system is built to make the decision process cleaner. It organizes review signals into a repeatable structure so visitors can compare options with more confidence.
What the Grader system is not
Grader.LLC is not designed to blindly publish every review, inflate scores, or pretend that a single rating tells the whole story. The goal is to create a better review environment with stronger structure.
Star ratings stay useful. Letter grades make them easier to understand.
Grader-family platforms can show star ratings, letter grades, and approved review counts together. This gives visitors both the detail of a score and the quick readability of a grade.
Excellent
Strong overall signals, high satisfaction, and fewer serious concerns.
Good
Generally positive signals with some areas visitors may want to compare.
Mixed
Balanced or uneven signals that deserve closer review before deciding.
Weak
Below-average signals or notable concerns across important categories.
Poor
Very low signals, serious issues, or patterns that require caution.
Approved reviews matter most.
The Grader system is built around a clear public rule: only approved reviews should count publicly. Reviews that are pending, rejected, spammy, incomplete, or abusive should not affect the visible grade.
Every platform should make the decision easier to understand.
Grader.LLC is the parent system. Each platform focuses on its own category, but the visitor experience should remain familiar: clear ratings, clear grades, clear criteria, and clear signals.
Ratings
Star ratings help visitors quickly understand the strength of user and platform signals.
Grades
Letter grades simplify the score so visitors can scan options faster.
Review counts
Approved review counts provide context behind the public rating and grade.
Comparisons
Side-by-side structures help visitors evaluate options using the same criteria.
One parent standard. Multiple focused platforms.
Grader.LLC supports focused review platforms across different categories. A hosting platform may grade uptime, support, pricing, and renewals. A cruise platform may grade ships, service, value, and traveler experience. A banking platform may grade fees, trust, mobile banking, and customer service.
The structure stays consistent
Visitors should not have to relearn how a platform works every time they move from one Grader-family site to another. The design, grading logic, disclosure mindset, and moderation rules should feel familiar.
The criteria changes by platform
Each category has different decision factors. That is why Grader-family platforms should use criteria that fit the specific industry while still following the parent system’s trust and transparency rules.
Clearer reviews. Stronger comparisons. Better decisions.
The Grader system is not just about assigning a score. It is about giving visitors a clearer way to understand what the score means, where it comes from, and how it compares to other options.
