Day 15 of Silence — When Does Connection Actually Happen?
Today marks Day 15 with no meaningful communication from #Nextdoor — nothing on #LinkedIn, nothing on #Facebook, and nothing on blog.nextdoor.com.
So it’s fair to ask:
- What are employees working on if not engaging neighbors, advertisers, and investors?
- Where are the award-winning public relations stories?
- What direction has leadership actually given?
Silence isn’t a neutral choice. It’s a strategy — whether intentional or not — and it carries a cost. Brand trust erodes. Momentum stalls. Questions compound.
Which leads to the predictable speculation:
“Maybe something amazing will happen on Monday.”
- But why Monday? Why not today?
- Does the connection only happen on weekdays?
- Do communities pause on weekends?
Does leadership clock out?
If the mission is connection, it should be visible every day, not queued for a calendar reset. Showing up consistently is how trust is built — especially when it’s uncomfortable.
This is a leadership moment for #NiravTolia. Direction isn’t just what’s said internally; it’s what the world sees externally. And right now, the signal is silent.
Connection requires conversation.
Momentum requires presence.
Day 15 is still counting.
Subscribe to NielFlamm.com
#Nextdoor #Leadership #Accountability #PublicRelations #BrandTrust #CustomerExperience #CX #CommunityTrust #InvestorRelations
Vegas Miles, M.I.T.S.A. #4, and a Rental Reality Check
Back in the Las Vegas area—this time behind the wheel of a Chevrolet Trailblazer and rolling through another chapter of M.I.T.S.A. #4.
No Strip glamour. No club hopping. Just real miles, real roads, and thoughts that come from traveling with intention. Renting a vehicle you didn’t choose, driving terrain you used to know well, and seeing it all through a very different lens now—that’s where the story lives.
This is a teaser.
The full experience, commentary, and observations are on video.
👉 Watch my latest video on Videos → Travel and come along for M.I.T.S.A. #4.
Sometimes the destination matters less than what the road reminds you of.
#Travel #MITSA #VegasDrive #RoadTripThoughts #TravelVideo #LasVegas #RentalCarLife #VideosTravel
Back in Vegas… So I Eat 🍽️
I’m back in my old stomping grounds of Las Vegas, and let’s be honest—things change.
I don’t gamble.
I don’t drink.
I’m definitely too old for the club scene.
So what do I do in Vegas now?
I eat. And I eat well.
Vegas has quietly (and sometimes loudly) become one of the best food cities in the country. From casual bites to next-level meals, the food scene is the real attraction for me these days.
I took a food tour, filmed it all, and shared the experience—no slots, no shots, just plates.
👉 Check out my video on Videos → Travel and come along for the ride.
Because in this chapter of Vegas… the food isn’t the gamble—the calories are. 😎
See more on NielFlamm.com
#LasVegas #VegasFood #FoodTour #TravelVideo #EatDontGamble #VegasEats #TravelLife #NielFlamm #VideosTravel
Using the Shareholder Voice — Participation Matters
This screenshot shows a simple but essential step:
I’ve formally reached out to #Nextdoor Investor Relations requesting information about the 2026 Annual Shareholder Meeting.
As a shareholder, I plan to submit questions through the official Q&A portal once the meeting details and proxy materials become available. Not to grandstand — but to participate. That’s how public companies are supposed to work.
Speaking up as a shareholder matters.
Right now, #NXDR is trading around $2.08 per share. That price reflects more than market conditions — it reflects confidence, execution, engagement, and trust. In my view, sustained improvement in share price doesn’t come from silence or avoidance; it comes from leadership clarity, operational accountability, and meaningful connection with users, advertisers, and investors.
This isn’t speculation framed as fact — it’s perspective.
#If Nextdoor improves transparency, fixes broken processes (especially moderation and engagement), and starts showing up consistently, confidence can return. When confidence returns, valuation often follows.
Public companies don’t get stronger when shareholders stay quiet. They get stronger when shareholders are informed, engaged, and willing to ask hard but fair questions — through the proper channels.
I'm planning on doing exactly that.
#ShareholderVoice #CorporateGovernance #InvestorEngagement #Nextdoor #Leadership #Accountability #PublicCompanies #NXDR
Another Day of Silence Is Another Day of Lost Trust
It’s another day where #Nextdoor hasn’t meaningfully connected with neighbors, advertisers, or investors.
Silence isn’t neutral. It has a cost.
When a company built on connection chooses not to engage, the price is paid in public relations debt and brand capital erosion:
- Neighbors feel unheard.
- Advertisers question ROI and audience trust.
- Investors read the absence as risk.
This route may feel safer in the short term, but over time, it compounds. Brand equity is built through presence, dialogue, and consistency—especially when things are uncomfortable. Going quiet doesn’t preserve reputation; it slowly spends it.
Connection requires conversation. Leadership requires showing up. And momentum requires effort—every day.
#NiravTolia allows this.
#Nextdoor #Leadership #BrandTrust #PublicRelations #CustomerExperience #CX #Accountability #InvestorRelations #CommunityTrust
When “Be Civil” Becomes Selective — Why Moderator Accountability Matters
A friend of mine — a neighbor in a different subdivision here in Mount Pleasant — was recently given a warning on Nextdoor. The details are thin, but what’s clear is troubling.
Here’s what I know:
A woman posted about fireworks on New Year’s, noting that some are permissible in parts of the area. In response, my friend suggested — jokingly — that perhaps a soundproof shelter could be built or used so people wouldn’t have to hear the fireworks.
A moderator then reached out and warned him to “be civil.”
My friend replied, pointing out that there were far harsher comments on the same thread — comments that were more personal and more aggressive — yet he was the only one who received a warning. His comment was neither mean nor personal compared to others.
That’s where the concern deepens.
My friend has an ethnic name, one not common among the local demographic or, to the best of our knowledge, the moderator committee. From his perspective, this feels like bias — not just inconsistent moderation, but selective enforcement. He now believes a suspension may be coming.
Whether intentional or not, this is precisely why the current, unpaid, anonymous moderation model needs reform. When moderators wield unchecked authority without transparent standards, analytics, or oversight, fairness becomes subjective—and trust erodes quickly.
This is not about one warning.
It’s about process, consistency, and accountability.
Moderation should be guided by clear expectations, measurable standards, and QA oversight — not feelings, not selective enforcement, and not anonymity without responsibility. That’s how platforms protect users, moderators, and the community as a whole.
To #NiravTolia — this is why I’ve been asking for dialogue.
This is why I’ve offered solutions.
And this is why I keep saying the system needs to change.
#NiravTolia — when are we meeting at DFW?
#Nextdoor #Leadership #CommunityTrust #BiasInTech #Moderation #CustomerExperience #CX #Accountability #ProcessImprovement #TrustAndSafety
An Open Invitation to Talk — #DFW, January 4
I’m extending an open and professional invitation to #NiravTolia — especially as a fellow Dallas resident.
On January 4, 2026, I’ll be flying back to Charleston, South Carolina, from Las Vegas, with a stop at #DFW. If schedules allow, I’d welcome the opportunity to meet briefly at the Grand Hyatt DFW or Hyatt Regency DFW to have a real, face-to-face conversation about the current state of Nextdoor.
Flight details (for transparency):
American Airlines 1890 arriving at #DFW
American Airlines 1638 departing #DFW
This wouldn’t be a confrontation — it would be a working discussion:
- Where #Nextdoor is today
- Clear areas of opportunity around trust, engagement, and execution
- A concrete plan to improve the unpaid moderator experience through consistency, fairness, transparency, and measurable outcomes
I’ve spent over two decades in CX, process improvement, and operational accountability. I also know an exceptional QA leader, Karen Romero, who can help design and implement moderator scorecards, analytics, and governance — moving moderation away from feelings and toward data-driven fairness that builds user trust and momentum.
To be clear: this is not about titles or roles.
It’s about making the platform work as it claims to.
An open hand is available.
If dialogue matters, this is an easy place to start.
Read more on NielFlamm.com
#Nextdoor #Leadership #Accountability #CustomerExperience #CX #TrustAndSafety #CommunityTrust #ProcessImprovement #OpenDialogue
Meets ADA, Misses the Mark - My Review of the Fairfield Inn & Suites DFW North/Iriving
I missed a connection at DFW to LAS, starting in CHS on American Airlines. It was the last flight there. This wasn't due to the weather; American Airlines rebooked me on a flight the next day, gave me a few meal vouchers, and a stay at a hotel. The Customer Service agent was super pleasant, to me at least, and I asked if I could choose a hotel; my preference is Marriott (Lifetime Silver Elite). This hotel offers a complimentary shuttle, breakfast, and a few nearby options (Aspen Creek). I took it.
I called the hotel to arrange the shuttle. It arrived 15 minutes later; it was a busy night with delays. The gentleman was kind, took my bags, and helped me into the van. This is important, and I'll explain in a bit. The ride, after one more stop to pick up other guests at another terminal, took 10 minutes. The driver took my bags out of the van and asked if I needed help getting into the facility (I declined). I gave the dude a few bucks, TRIP THE PEOPLE THAT HELP!!!!!! I noticed, as did the driver, that I was the only person to give a small gratuity on that ride.
The young lady I spoke to about arranging the ride from the airport was at the front desk, alone. I wasn't in a rush to get into the room; I let the four other families ahead of me go in first. I'm also slower. The desk agent was super efficient, it took her 5 minutes to get the folks ahead of me their keys and on their way. I was strategic about being last in line: I had a few requests and wanted to spend a bit more time having them honored, without making the folks behind me upset.
The requests were/are for a room with a roll-in shower and a pull-down seat. I'm an above-knee amputee who is ambulatory, yet requires the pull-down chair, or a shower chair, to get all the nooks and crannies cleaned. She got that room assigned to me. All she needed was my hotel voucher, no i.d., nor card on file for incidentals. She mentioned the room was a suite with a king-size bed on the second floor. All good for me.
The room was 208, not far from the elevator. The last few Fairfield, SpringHill, and other Marriott Brand hotels I've stayed at with a roll-in shower or accessible room have been on the far side of the hotel. This room was about three away from the elevator.
I enter the room, and there is a light switch to the right. The door isn't overly heavy, making it easy to join. The bathroom is big to the right; there is a walled-off sitting area to the left, and the bed is straight ahead. I don't spend much time in the amenities in the room; it's just one night, and I'm getting 7 hours of sleep.
The next day, I wake up, and this is where the hotel fails. The areas for improvement concern the accessibility of the shower. The bathroom is big, bright, with a TON of great grab bars. This is fantastic! It's the shower. Someone who isn't handicapped, nor understands the needs of a person with a disability or limb difference, designed this room. Here we go...
* The Shower Seat isn't long/deep enough from the wall. The seat comes down, and I'm barely able to sit in the seat without feeling I'm about to slip/fall out of it. I'm not a very large man, 6 feet, about 195 lbs.
* The removable shower head isn't long enough. The roll-in shower is oversized, yet the removable head barely reaches the tip of the shower chair. Again, it's challenging to get to the nooks and crannies.
* The lip keeping water in the shower isn't tall enough. I left my C-Leg prosthetic on the floor, and a pool of water formed beneath it.
My $.02 is that hotels do the bare minimum to meet ADA standards. I get it, before the amputation, I gave it zero thought. Now being part of the community, I understand the need for a true handicap/disability consultant to consider how to make a stay truly inviting for someone similar to me.
Is This Acceptable in 2026? A Coke Zero, an Airport, and a Fashion Crime
Maybe it's me, it very well might be.
I'm at the airport hobbling to find a Coke Zero. MY OTHER LEG FOR A COKE ZERO!!! As I'm making my way downtown through the crowd (and I'm homebound). A woman about 5 feet 5 inches passes me by.
I do a double-take. Yes, I see it, it is happening, and it passes.
I immediately asked ChatGPT to create an image using a combination of descriptive adjectives and nouns to represent the horror I had witnessed. It came very close.
Is this acceptable in 2026?
Silence Isn’t a New Year’s Message
It’s New Year’s Day — and there hasn’t been a single post from anyone representing #Nextdoor on LinkedIn, #Facebook, or even blog.nextdoor.com welcoming in 2026 or wishing their “neighbors” an amazing new year.
For a platform built on community, connection, and belonging, that silence is loud.
Moments like New Year’s Day matter. They’re symbolic. They’re human. They are opportunities to show presence, gratitude, and leadership — especially for a company whose mission is literally about bringing people together. When there’s no message, no acknowledgment, no shared optimism, it sends a signal — intentional or not.
And yet, I still believe there’s hope for 2026.
Hope that #Nextdoor can recommit to its core values.
Hope that conversation replaces silence.
Hope that leadership chooses engagement over avoidance.
We hope that neighbors — including users, businesses, employees, and shareholders — are met where they are.
This isn’t about perfection. It’s about showing up.
Be better, #Nextdoor.
And let 2026 be the year connection actually means conversation.
#niravtolia
#Nextdoor #Leadership #Community #Connection #Accountability #HopeFor2026 #CustomerExperience #CX
The Daily Connection Silence Inspection
Connection Silence Inspector: Bob “The Decibel” Quietman 🕵️♂️
(Badge reads: “Department of Missed Conversations”)
Quietman: “Alright folks, it’s been another day since #Nextdoor posted on LinkedIn or updated the blog. Time for the silence inspection. Nirav, how’s ‘connecting without connecting’ going?”
Nirav: “We’re being… thoughtful.”
Quietman: “Ah yes. Thoughtful silence. A classic.”
Intern: “Should I draft a post? Maybe turn comments back on?”
Clown: 🤡 honks horn “Whoa there! That might invite… opinions!”
Mime: 🤐 (mimes typing a heartfelt post, then slaps an invisible ‘Comments Disabled’ sign over it)
Quietman: “Impressive form, Mime. Olympic-level avoidance.”
Quietman (checking clipboard):
“Let’s review outcomes so far:
Connecting in silence: ❌
Removing comments: ❌
Disabling feedback: ❌
Building trust: ❌
Saving time vs. just replying once: ❌❌❌”
Nirav: “But no one can criticize us if they can’t comment.”
Quietman: “True. And no one can trust you either. Trade-offs.”
Intern: “So… this is working well?”
Clown: 🤡 confetti cannon fires, immediately vacuumed back up “Huge success!”
Mime: 🤐 (mimes a shrinking community, then a stock chart going down)
Quietman: “Final note: For a platform that claims to connect neighbors and businesses, this strategy is… bold. Not effective. But bold.”
Quietman (closing report):
“Another day logged. Zero conversations achieved. See you tomorrow.”
Inspector’s Verdict:
Silence has connected exactly no one.
Conversation remains available whenever leadership is ready.
End inspection.
New Year’s Resolutions: Honest Thoughts, No Filters
Every year around this time, the same question comes up: What’s your New Year’s resolution?
For some people, resolutions are motivating. For others, they feel like pressure wrapped in optimism — big promises made on a calendar change that don’t always survive February. I’ve got thoughts on that. Real ones. Honest ones. And I decided to talk them through on video instead of pretending I had a perfectly polished answer.
In recovery, I’ve learned that change doesn’t need a holiday, a new month, or a catchy phrase. It requires honesty, consistency, and a willingness to show up — especially on the hard days. Resolutions can be helpful, but only if they’re grounded in reality, not in shame, guilt, or outside expectations.
In my latest video, I break down how I look at New Year’s resolutions now, what’s worked for me, what hasn’t, and why progress matters more than promises.
👉 Watch the full video at NielFlamm.com → Recovery
If you’re questioning resolutions, redefining them, or choosing a different approach altogether, you’re not alone.
#NewYearsResolutions #Recovery #ProgressNotPerfection #HonestReflections #LifeInRecovery #OneDayAtATime #NielFlamm #RecoveryJourney
Guess What Happened Again
Guess What Happened Again
About an hour ago, it happened again.
A recruiter from #Nextdoor viewed my LinkedIn profile.
That makes this the 8th #Nextdoor employee to do so — and the 2nd recruiter — since I began publicly documenting and questioning #Nextdoor’s leadership decisions, process breakdowns, and refusal to engage in open dialogue.
Let’s be clear about the pattern:
I raise concerns about #Nextdoor disabling comments on LinkedIn.
I document silence from #Nextdoor leadership and the absence of blog updates.
I offer an olive branch, real CX expertise, and actionable solutions.
There is no response — publicly or privately.
And then… another #Nextdoor employee quietly checks my profile.
This isn’t a coincidence anymore.
It’s visibility without engagement—observation without conversation.
And that’s the core issue.
#Nextdoor positions itself as a platform for connection — neighbors, businesses, and communities coming together. Yet at the corporate level, the behavior is the opposite: no comments, no replies, no acknowledgment, no dialogue. Just watching from the sidelines.
If you’re curious enough to look, you’re interested enough to talk.
I’m not hiding. My posts are public. My critiques are direct. My intent has been consistent from day one: make Nextdoor better by addressing broken processes, accountability gaps, and leadership blind spots.
To #NiravTolia and the leadership team:
Engagement doesn’t happen through profile views. Trust isn’t built through silence. And connection doesn’t exist without conversation.
An Olive Branch — With a Plan
Let me be explicit: I’m willing to help.
This doesn’t require hand-wringing or PR spin. It requires process, systems, and accountability.
I know an exceptional QA leader — Karen Romero — who can help stand this up properly. Together, we can:
Build clear moderator standards and expectations
Create consistent, fair, and transparent moderation workflows
Replace subjective “feelings-based” enforcement with analytics, metrics, and scorecards
Implement QA reviews, coaching loops, and continuous improvement
Measure outcomes that actually matter: trust, consistency, and user experience
This is how platforms mature.
This is how confidence is rebuilt.
This is how momentum is regained.
And yes — this deserves a real budget. If #Nextdoor can fund ads while disabling comments, it can fund the operational backbone that sustains community trust.
I’ll repeat it: this was never about noise.
It’s about building something better — and doing the work to support it.
If this many people inside #Nextdoor are paying attention, then the next step is obvious.
Stop watching.
Start talking.
The door has been open the entire time.
#Nextdoor #Leadership #Accountability #CustomerExperience #CX #QualityAssurance #TrustAndSafety #CommunityTrust #ShareholderVoice #ProcessImprovement
Full Steam Ahead… or Full Stop? — A Dialogue on Silence
Narrator: It’s been 11 days since #Nextdoor last meaningfully reached out, engaged, or connected with anyone on LinkedIn — and no updates on blog.nextdoor.com either.
Let’s discuss what “full steam” and “maximum effort” look like.
Me: “Hey #NiravTolia, anyone from Nextdoor want to talk? LinkedIn? The blog? Anything?”
Nirav Tolia: “…”
C-Suite Member #1: “We’re aligned.”
Me: “Aligned with… silence?”
C-Suite Member #2: “We’re being thoughtful.”
Me: “Thoughtful looks a lot like inactive.”
Intern: “Should I post something?”
Clown: 🤡 honks horn “Careful! Comments might appear!”
Mime: 🤐 (acts out ‘community,’ then locks an invisible comment box)
Me: “This is supposed to be ‘full steam’?”
Narrator: No posts. No dialogue. No acknowledgment. No blog updates. For a platform whose mission is connection, this is a strange way to end the year. To shareholders and investors: Silence at the finish line isn’t a strategy. It’s a signal. If this is how 2025 closes, it’s fair to ask what kind of momentum — if any — 2026 opens with.
Doors are still open. The olive branch is still on the table. Karen Romero & I will develop a plan.
A conversation is a start.
Your move.
NielFlamm.com
#Leadership #Accountability #Execution #Nextdoor #CX #CommunityTrust #ShareholderVoice #FinishStrong #NiravTolia #Silenceisntastrategy
You Can’t Claim a Connection While Disabling Conversation
This screenshot was taken from Facebook on December 29, 2025, at 9:15 PM Eastern — and the most telling part isn’t the ad.
It’s the line at the bottom:
“#Nextdoor for Business has limited the ability to comment.”
Someone at #Nextdoor had the opportunity to publish this post — and intentionally turned off comments.
Let that sink in.
#Nextdoor claims to connect neighbors and businesses, yet when businesses and users are presented with messaging about growth, feedback is disabled.
No dialogue. No engagement. No accountability.
And before this gets framed as “one detractor being loud” — I’m clearly not the only one. Limiting comments is a preemptive move. It signals anticipation of criticism, not confidence in the product or the message.
This is how #Nextdoor ends 2025?
I’ve extended an olive branch publicly and professionally. I’ve offered help, insight, and real CX/process solutions. I’ve received no response — not even a “thanks but no thanks.” No form letter. No acknowledgment. Just silence.
How does #NiravTolia allow a platform built on community to shut down conversation repeatedly?
How does #Nextdoor reconcile its mission with actions like this?
If comments are a risk, that’s not a moderation problem — that’s a trust problem.
So the real question is no longer about 2025.
What is in store for #Nextdoor in 2026?
Because connection without conversation isn’t a connection at all.
#Nextdoor #Leadership #Accountability #CustomerExperience #CommunityTrust #SocialPlatforms #ShareholderVoice #CX #Transparency
How You Finish the Year Is How You Start the Next One — A Warning for #Nextdoor
How a person — or a company like #Nextdoor — finishes the year is often the clearest indicator of how the next year will go.
Wrapping it up early, going quiet, or mentally checking out does not breed momentum. It doesn’t build confidence. And it certainly doesn’t inspire trust — especially when that company is #Nextdoor, a platform built on visibility, engagement, and connection.
That’s why the silence from #Nextdoor matters.
As of December 19, 2025, it has been over a week since #Nextdoor has posted on LinkedIn or updated the #Nextdoor blog. No engagement from Nextdoor. I don't see a message from Nextdoor leadership—no visibility from a company that depends on daily participation and trust.
Which raises a fair question:
Did #Nextdoor, under #NiravTolia, throw in the towel on 2025?
Leadership obsession shows up in the details — especially at the end of the year. Finishing strong requires presence, urgency, and belief in what you’re building. When #Nextdoor goes silent, it sends the opposite signal: disengagement.
This should concern #Nextdoor shareholders and investors.
When #Nextdoor (#NXDR) went public on November 8, 2021, it reached a high of roughly $13 per share. Today, NXDR sits near $2.18. Markets don’t punish effort — they punish lax execution, disengagement, and lack of conviction. And those signals are increasingly visible in #Nextdoor’s behavior, not just its balance sheet.
This attitude is a warning sign. Silence at the finish line often predicts stagnation at the start of the next race. There are no holidays for success. There is no “we’ll pick it up next year” for #Nextdoor leadership.
Momentum at #Nextdoor is either maintained — or lost.
How #Nextdoor closes the year tells shareholders, employees, users, and investors exactly how seriously Nextdoor is taking the next one.
#Leadership #Execution #FinishStrong #Accountability #Nextdoor #ShareholderAlert #InvestorWarning #BusinessDiscipline #NoDaysOff
4:30 AM, Dialysis, and a Flat Tire — Finding Joy Anyway
At 4:30 in the morning, the world is quiet. No traffic. No noise. Just darkness, cold air, and routine.
I stepped outside to head to dialysis — and there it was. A flat tire.
Of course it was.
In that moment, frustration would’ve been easy. Early mornings, treatment days, and unexpected problems usually stack the odds against joy. But something different happened. I paused. I laughed. Because this is life — messy, inconvenient, and completely unscripted.
The joy isn’t in the flat tire.
The joy is in still showing up.
The joy is in adapting, solving, and refusing to let a small setback define the day.
Dialysis teaches patience. Recovery teaches perspective. And mornings like this remind me that joy isn’t about perfect circumstances — it’s about choosing how you respond when things go sideways before sunrise.
#DialysisLife #EndStageRenalDisease #ChronicIllness #FindingJoy #Resilience #LifeUnscripted #KeepShowingUp
I Stumbled Into PowerPoint Cameo—and I’m Not Going Back
While updating my deck to tell my recovery story, I noticed a feature I’d never used before: Cameo. No clue what it was, so I did what we all do—I hit the interwebs.
Turns out, #PowerPoint Cameo lets you embed the presenter directly into the slides. When you’re sharing in #Zoom, #Teams, or #GoogleMeet, this is a game-changer for engagement and presence.
This is a fantastic resource for Instructional Designers, L&D pros, and facilitators who want to ditch the tiny speaker box and design more human, engaging learning experiences.
👉 Great explainer here (worth bookmarking):
https://bit.ly/ppt-cameo-overview
(shortened)
Let’s get rid of the mini speaker box. More Cameo. More connection.
#InstructionalDesign #LearningAndDevelopment #PowerPoint #PresentationDesign #VirtualTraining #AdultLearning #EdTech #Storytelling
🚨 SCAM ALERT: TikTok “Car Deals” Are NOT Real 🚨
If you’re seeing TikTok videos advertising brand-new trucks or SUVs for impossibly low prices — this is a scam. Period.
Here’s how it works 👇
🔹 The fake deal
You’ll see posts claiming things like:
“Full price $8,000.”
“Down payment $400.”
On vehicles that actually retail for $50,000–$70,000+. That alone should stop you cold.
🔹 WhatsApp = red flag 🚩
They’ll push you off TikTok and onto WhatsApp instead of:
A dealership phone number
A verified business website
A physical address
Why WhatsApp?
Harder to trace
Easier to disappear
No consumer protections
Often tied to overseas scam rings.
Legitimate dealerships do not conduct sales this way.
🔹 That “down payment” isn’t a down payment
It’s not going toward a car.
It’s not refundable.
It’s simply a cheap, tempting amount designed to:
Feel “affordable”
Lower your guard
Get some money from you quickly.
Once you send it, they’re gone.
🔹 Who they target (and exploit)
This scam preys on:
People living paycheck to paycheck
Those with bad or no credit
Anyone desperate for transportation
Folks unfamiliar with absolute car pricing
It's cruel. It’s intentional. And it’s predatory.
🔹 Reality check
No one is selling a brand-new GMC, Ford, Toyota, or Chevy for a fraction of its real value.
If the price looks insanely, unbelievably low, it’s because it’s fake.
💡 What we can do
Call it out
Educate others
Share real information
Report these accounts
Talk to friends & family who might fall for this.
With awareness and community action, we can shut this down.
📣 Please share this post
📖 Read and share the full breakdown on my blog: NielFlamm.com
If this saves even one person from being scammed, it’s worth it.
#ScamAlert #TikTokScam #CarBuyingScam #financialliteracyy #ConsumerProtection #PredatoryScams #SpreadAwareness