TheViking said:
... in your opinion? What elements should a good review contain? Amount of pictures? Etc...
It should follow a logical progression, an analysis of key elements, form over function, quality of finish, value for money etc. The review should contain balance and be a fair appraisal, niether a love-up nor a slander-fest, but objective, frank and honest opinion. If on balance it comes out well - fair enough, if on balance it doesnt come out well, fair enough.
Very few products are perfect and any review that fails to mention any flaws whatsoever, leaves me drawing questions over the honesty of the rest of it. I slot it into a "take this with a pintch of salt" category. Often reviewers will feel uncomfortable highlighting negatives, but there is nothing worse than reading a clearly sycophantic review and they are very easy to spot. If some important negatives are highlighted, then it adds reader confidence to the objectivity of the reviewer and give the overall review a greater credibility.
Lots of pictures, pictures are good. Good pictures are better. If you think an aspect is good, dont just say it's good, but explain why you think that aspect makes the item good. Same for things you decide are not so good - tell us why you think that. Let us follow your logic and reasoning. Let the reader decide if he/she agrees with your logic.
It may help to have categories and then mentally score the item for each category. It will help you evaluate the product fairly.
Some suggestions...
Packaging, delivery & service
A thorough description of the product.
First impressions
Quality of fit & finish
Form & function (does it do what it's supposed to do?)
Value for money
Overall conclusion & suggestions for improvements
Photo's where necessary for each of the above. Be sure to break the review up into logical paragraphs for easy reading.
Just my 2p.