Here’s a truth that catches most people off guard: the best tradespeople in the UK actively seek out platforms with the strictest vetting processes—and deliberately avoid those that make joining too easy.
It seems counterintuitive at first. Why would successful professionals want more barriers, more checks, and more verification requirements? Surely easier access means more opportunities?
But speak to any tradesperson earning over £60,000 annually, and you’ll hear the same perspective: lenient vetting doesn’t create opportunities—it creates problems that undermine legitimate professionals and damage entire platforms.
The BBC Investigation That Changed Everything
In 2018, a BBC Inside Out investigation revealed something that quality tradespeople had suspected for years: some of the UK’s most prominent trade platforms were failing to conduct basic verification checks.
Reporter Phillip Norton, with zero building experience, successfully created profiles on major platforms within hours. On Rated People, he was listed in just two hours. On MyBuilder, a quick internet search helped him pass the screening process with fake qualifications and insurance details.
The shocking results:
- No verification of actual trade experience
- Fake five-star reviews easily added
- Fabricated insurance documents accepted
- Bogus qualifications listed without proper checking
- Profiles approved despite zero legitimate credentials
Phil Spencer, celebrity endorser of Rated People, admitted he was “shocked to learn some bad tradesmen get through the net.” But experienced tradespeople weren’t shocked at all—they’d been competing against suspicious profiles for years.
Why Strict Vetting Protects Quality Professionals
The investigation confirmed what successful tradespeople already understood: platforms with weak vetting processes don’t just harm customers—they systematically undermine legitimate professionals.
The Race to the Bottom Effect
When platforms allow unqualified or uninsured individuals to compete for the same work as established professionals, it creates inevitable pricing pressure that benefits no one except the platform itself.
The competitive dynamic:
- Legitimate tradesperson quotes £1,200 for bathroom work (accounting for proper insurance, quality materials, skilled labour)
- Unvetted individual quotes £650 (no insurance costs, questionable materials, limited skill)
- Customer chooses lower quote, unaware of the risks
- Poor work results, customer loses money, entire platform loses credibility
- Legitimate tradesperson invests time in quote preparation with zero return
Sarah, a qualified electrician in Manchester, left two major platforms in 2024: “I was spending three hours preparing detailed quotes for customers who’d then hire someone charging half my rate—someone who turned out to have no Part P certification and had never completed an electrical course. After the second time a customer came back asking me to fix their dangerous work, I realised these platforms were actively harming my reputation just by association.”
The Reputation by Association Problem
Quality tradespeople understand that platform credibility directly impacts their own professional reputation. When customers have negative experiences with unvetted tradespeople on a platform, it damages trust in everyone listed there.
The credibility equation:
- Platform accepts everyone → Poor work happens frequently → Platform reputation suffers → Quality customers avoid the platform → Quality tradespeople lose access to best customers
Conversely, platforms with rigorous vetting create positive cycles that benefit legitimate professionals:
- Strict vetting → Consistently quality work → Strong platform reputation → Premium customers attracted → Quality tradespeople access better projects
What Effective Vetting Actually Looks Like
The BBC investigation revealed dramatic differences in how various platforms approach verification. Understanding these differences helps quality tradespeople choose the right platforms.
Tier One: Comprehensive Verification
Which? Trusted Traders stood out in the BBC investigation by requiring face-to-face meetings with staff. This level of verification creates genuine barriers that deter fraudulent applications whilst giving legitimate tradespeople confidence in the platform.
Gold standard vetting includes:
- In-person verification meetings
- Minimum five independent references (verified separately)
- Proof of public liability insurance (validated with insurers)
- Qualification certificates (checked with issuing bodies)
- Trading history verification (Companies House checks)
- Criminal record considerations for relevant offences
- Ongoing compliance monitoring (not just one-time checks)
Checkatrade’s traditional approach required applicants to pass up to 12 verification checks, including providing minimum five references and having qualifications and public liability insurance examined. This comprehensive process meant legitimate tradespeople could be confident they weren’t competing against cowboys.
Tier Two: Moderate Verification
Some platforms conduct identity checks and request documentation but don’t necessarily verify information independently.
Standard verification typically includes:
- Identity document checks
- Self-reported qualification declarations
- Insurance certificate uploads (may not verify with insurers)
- References provided by applicant (may not independently verify)
- Credit and fraud prevention agency screening
Whilst better than nothing, this level of checking creates vulnerabilities. As the BBC investigation showed, fake insurance documents and qualifications can pass this screening with minimal effort.
Tier Three: Minimal Verification
The BBC investigation revealed that some prominent platforms required virtually no meaningful verification—just basic information and perhaps an identity check.
Problems with minimal vetting:
- No verification of trade experience or qualifications
- No independent reference checking
- Insurance documents accepted without validation
- Profiles approved within hours
- Self-generated positive reviews possible
Quality tradespeople increasingly avoid these platforms entirely, recognising that association with them brings more problems than opportunities.
The Financial Impact of Vetting Quality
Strict vetting doesn’t just protect reputation—it directly impacts earning potential for quality tradespeople.
Customer Quality Correlation
Research shows clear patterns: customers using platforms with stringent vetting processes approach projects differently than those using minimal-vetting platforms.
High-vetting platform customers typically:
- Have realistic budgets for quality work
- Value qualifications and experience
- Read reviews carefully and ask informed questions
- Understand that proper work costs appropriate amounts
- Commit to projects rather than endless quote shopping
Low-vetting platform customers often:
- Prioritise lowest price above all other factors
- Question the need for insurance and qualifications
- Request multiple quotes with no intention of accepting fair pricing
- Use professional quotes to negotiate with uninsured competitors
- Have unrealistic expectations about project costs
Mark, a London-based plumber, tracked his conversion rates across different platforms in 2024: “On the platform requiring five references and insurance verification, I won 40% of quotes I submitted. On the platform that approved me in three hours, I won only 12%—and those jobs had the worst profit margins because everyone was racing to the bottom on price.”
Time Investment Return
Quality vetting protects tradespeople’s most valuable resource: time spent on quote preparation.
Time economics on high-vetting platforms:
- Fewer competitors per lead (reduced competition density)
- Higher-quality customers (better conversion rates)
- Better project margins (customers value professionalism)
- Reduced time wasted (fewer tire-kickers and price-shoppers)
Time economics on low-vetting platforms:
- Every lead shared with 5-10 competitors
- Lower conversion rates (often under 15%)
- Race-to-bottom pricing pressure
- Significant time wasted on non-serious inquiries
For quality tradespeople, the maths is straightforward: spending three hours on quotes where you win 40% of projects is far more profitable than spending three hours on quotes where you win 12%.
What Quality Tradespeople Look For in Platform Vetting
Successful tradespeople have learned to evaluate platforms based on specific vetting indicators before investing time and money in membership.
Red Flags That Signal Weak Vetting:
Immediate approval processes
- Profile created and approved within hours
- No waiting period for verification checks
- No contact from platform staff during application
Minimal documentation requirements
- Only basic identity verification requested
- Self-reported qualifications accepted without proof
- Insurance documents not independently verified
Easy reference provision
- References provided by applicant without independent verification
- No requirement for reference contact details
- Email addresses accepted without checking domains
No ongoing compliance monitoring
- One-time vetting with no follow-up
- No regular insurance and qualification renewal checks
- No mechanism for removing profiles that no longer meet standards
Green Flags That Signal Quality Vetting:
Thorough application processes
- Multiple verification stages over several weeks
- Face-to-face meetings or video verification calls
- Direct contact with vetting staff who ask specific questions
Comprehensive documentation requirements
- Original qualification certificates required
- Insurance validation conducted directly with insurers
- Business registration verified through Companies House
- Photographic identification checked against databases
Independent reference verification
- Platform contacts references directly using independently verified details
- References must come from recent customers, not friends or family
- Multiple reference types required (customers, suppliers, professional bodies)
Ongoing compliance monitoring
- Annual insurance and qualification renewal verification
- Regular compliance audits
- Customer complaint investigation processes
- Removal mechanisms for failing to meet standards
The Competitive Advantage of Limited Membership
Here’s another insight that surprises many: quality tradespeople actively prefer platforms that limit the number of members per area rather than accepting unlimited sign-ups.
The Density Problem
Platforms that accept every applicant regardless of local market saturation create impossible competitive environments where no one can thrive.
Oversaturated markets result in:
- 10-15 plumbers competing for every local inquiry
- Pricing pressure that makes quality work unprofitable
- Customer confusion from too many choices
- Race to bottom on both price and standards
Controlled membership creates:
- 3-5 quality professionals per trade per area
- Sustainable pricing that allows proper work
- Customer confidence in making informed choices
- Reputation-based competition rather than price wars
Birmingham-based builder James explains: “I joined a platform that caps members at five builders per postcode area. Yes, it took three months to get approved because someone had to leave first. But now I’m on there, my conversion rate is 45% and my average project value is £12,000. On my old platform where they accepted everyone, I was lucky to convert 15% at £6,000 average.”
The Professional Community Benefit
Platforms with rigorous vetting don’t just create better customer matching—they build professional communities where quality tradespeople support rather than undermine each other.
Collaborative vs. Adversarial Environments
Low-vetting platforms create adversarial dynamics:
- Everyone competing against questionable competitors
- No trust in others’ qualifications or work quality
- Reluctance to refer complementary trades
- Individual survival mentality
High-vetting platforms enable collaboration:
- Mutual respect among verified professionals
- Confidence in referring customers to platform colleagues
- Shared learning and professional development
- Community mentality supporting collective success
Many successful tradespeople report that their best business growth has come from referrals from other professionals on the same high-vetting platform—electricians referring plumbers, plumbers referring builders, builders referring decorators—creating networks of quality that benefit everyone involved.
Making the Choice: Vetting as Your Competitive Advantage
For quality tradespeople, platform vetting processes aren’t bureaucratic nuisances—they’re competitive moats that protect professional reputation and earnings.
The most successful professionals understand this completely. They seek out platforms where getting approved takes weeks, not hours. They appreciate reference checks that actually verify information rather than just collecting email addresses. They value ongoing compliance monitoring that ensures standards remain high.
The fundamental truth: If it’s easy for you to join a platform, it’s equally easy for unqualified cowboys to join that platform. And once they’re there, they’ll undercut your pricing, damage customer trust, and waste your time competing for work you’ll never win at profitable rates.
Conversely, when joining a platform requires proving your qualifications, demonstrating your experience, and passing rigorous verification checks, you’re entering an environment where your professionalism is protected, your reputation is enhanced, and your pricing is respected.
The choice is clear: quality tradespeople don’t avoid platforms with strict vetting—they specifically seek them out, knowing that every verification hurdle they clear is another barrier protecting them from unfair competition and reputational damage.
Ready to join a platform that values quality, verification, and professional standards? Discover how TraderStreet.uk’s comprehensive vetting process protects quality tradespeople whilst attracting the customers who genuinely value skilled, qualified professionals.