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How we judge Shonky nominations

The criteria we use to judge which products and services make the final cut.

Shonkys 2020 judging

Every year we receive hundreds of nominations for Shonky products and services from CHOICE members and staff. 

While some Shonky nominees may not be breaking laws or breaching regulations – though sometimes they are – we believe that consumers deserve better products and services. 

So how do we decide which nominations make the cut?

First, a nomination has to meet one or more of the following criteria.

Criteria for being named a Shonky 

  1. Fails a standard
  2. Poor performance on CHOICE tests
  3. Hidden charges
  4. Lack of transparency
  5. False claims or broken promises
  6. Consumers are worse off because of it
  7. Consumer confusion
  8. Poor value for money
  9. Consumer frustration, or just plain outrage

We can prove it

We receive a lot of nominations where someone has misread or misunderstood some instructions or terms and conditions, say. 

Sometimes people swear something has suddenly changed for the worse (more expensive, smaller, fewer features), yet there's no record of what the product or service was like before to compare with. 

And their shonkiness has to be objectively quantifiable or measurable. We get a lot of Shonky nominations for things that can't possibly work, but haven't been tested and/or would be difficult to test.

It affects a lot of people

Beryl the local hairdresser giving you a dodgy hair colour last Saturday doesn't affect very many people, but a Coles $10 meal deal that actually costs $37.74 does. 

And it has to be more than just a one-off. We will buy and test a Shonky-nominated product accused of poor performance, just as when we find a product that performs poorly in our normal lab tests, we buy and test another of the same model to ensure we didn't just happen to buy the only dud one produced.

The final cut

Products that meet one or more of these criteria make it to the shortlist. 

From there we look at how the issue will resonate with consumers, as well as government authorities and the media, which have the power to prod companies to pick up their act. We've had a number of victories for consumers this way.

The best – or should that be worst? – of these end up being our Shonky Award winners.

We care about accuracy. See something that's not quite right in this article? Let us know or read more about fact-checking at CHOICE.

Stock images: Getty, unless otherwise stated.