Zach Sussman didn't want to search the Yellow Pages or pay $50 for an Angie's List subscription when he needed a handyman.
The idea of strangers recommending a service provider didn't appeal to the 30-year-old from Minnetonka.
"I don't trust anonymous people's reviews when I'm hiring someone who's going to be in my house," he said. "It's a matter of security."
So Sussman used a start-up website, BeHeroic.com. The Twin Cities-based business takes a different approach to finding a good auto mechanic, plumber or other service provider.
Heroic lets friends form their own user group, a mini-version of Angie's List or Consumers' Checkbook, where they know and trust everyone in the group. They sign in through Facebook to gain access to reviews written by their friends.
It taps into recommendations from people whose standards, interests and biases are known because they're friends or family, said Dan Linstroth, 28, one of Heroic's four co-founders. "I can understand the context of my friend's recommendation, but I may not understand an anonymous five-star rating."
Millennials are three times more likely to turn to social channels than boomers when differentiating among products or services, according to a Bazaarvoice.com survey. They want feedback from experts and people with common interests, including personal connections, although not exclusively.
And they prefer to get their information indirectly. "They turn to online rather than human communication," said Dan Schawbel, founder of Millennial Branding, a Gen Y research and management consulting firm.