Trust and safety on VEXORS
How VEXORS builds trust between companies that have never met: the Trust Score, the Verified badge, two-way ratings, and the privacy of your data. Start here, then go deeper.
What you'll learn
- Understand the four ways VEXORS builds trust between companies
- Know which trust signals others see on your profile
- Find the right trust topic to go deeper on
Procurement runs on trust, and on VEXORS you are often dealing with a company you have never met. You might receive a competitive bid from a supplier two countries away, or an enquiry from a buyer you have never heard of. The hard question is always the same: can I rely on this company? VEXORS is built to answer that question with evidence, not guesswork, so you can deal confidently with companies far beyond your existing network.
Trust here is not a single badge or a star rating in isolation. It is a small system of signals that work together, each one hard to fake, each one telling you something different about who you are about to deal with.
Why this matters
The whole point of a trust network is that reputation travels with a company wherever it goes. A supplier cannot start fresh with a clean slate after a string of upheld complaints, and a buyer who pays late and rates unfairly carries that record forward. Because the signals are earned through real activity and reviewed before they affect anyone, the company you see on a profile is the company you will actually deal with.
How trust works here
Four signals combine to tell you how reliable a company is. None of them stands alone, and together they are far harder to game than any single rating.
| Signal | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Trust Score | A single 0-to-100 rating built from a company's profile, activity, track record, and the ratings it has earned. The fastest read on overall reliability. |
| Verified badge | VEXORS has checked the company's business details and documents. A Verified company is who it says it is. |
| Two-way ratings | After a deal closes, both sides rate each other. Consistent strong ratings are evidence of how a company actually behaves, not how it markets itself. |
| Data privacy | Your private details, including your email, are never shown to counterparties. Trust does not require exposing your contact information. |
What others see on your profile
Your company profile is where these signals come together for anyone deciding whether to work with you. When a buyer or supplier opens your public profile in Discover, they see your Trust Score, your Verified badge if you have earned it, and your ratings from past deals, alongside your company name, categories, and catalog.
What they never see is your contact information. Your email and private details stay yours. Counterparties identify and reach you through VEXORS, by your company name, not by personal contact details exposed on a page.
When you are comparing two suppliers on price, their trust signals are the tiebreaker. A Verified supplier with a Trust Score in the high eighties and two dozen strong buyer ratings is a measurably safer bet than an unverified one with no track record, even if the second one quotes a little lower. The signals turn an unknown company into a known quantity.
Your trust topics
Each signal has its own guide. Start wherever your question is.
- Get Verified walks through submitting your business details for verification and earning the Verified badge that sits on your profile.
- Ratings and reviews explains how two-way ratings work, when you can rate a counterparty, and how to earn strong ratings yourself.
- What others can and cannot see lays out exactly which parts of your profile are public and confirms that your private contact details never are.
- Understanding your Trust Score breaks down the four inputs that build your score, what can lower it, and how to raise it.
New to the network
You have just registered and want to be taken seriously by buyers who do not know you. The order that works best: complete your profile, then get Verified, then start bidding and delivering so ratings and a track record begin to accumulate. Within a few completed deals, your profile carries real evidence rather than an empty shell, and your Trust Score reflects it.
Next steps
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