Why not just avoid the problematic nature of such questions in the first place?
If your question is:
What's the best program/service to do X?
Then instead just ask:
How do I do X?
If the best way to do X is to use a particular program/service, you know what will happen? You'll get the best program/service to do X! If the best way is a different approach that's even better than a particular program/service, then you'll get that instead and will be better off.
Essentially, the answers you'll ideally get from the second question will be a superset that contains all of the answers of the first, with the potential to have more. And past that, it's also in the state where its answers are not items, that whole "Real Questions have Answers" no longer biting you. You'll be getting solutions to your problem.
When I first joined Stack Overflow, the one thing I needed was "the ability to mark up PDFs with a dynamic watermark that could not be edited by users who read the PDF, but I could programmatically change without needing to keep a dummy copy of an unwatermarked PDF". I was a bit scared of coding it up myself, I'd never even worked with PDF files at all in the past and I figured a 3rd party utility was up my creek. Nevertheless, I asked a question on how to do it. First answer I got was a piece of software. It worked brilliantly, although we never got to implement it due to everything else in the project taking precedence. I also learned how it all works, too, but the service was the big prize.
Fact is, if the best option is a provider, you'll get that if you just ask for the service you need.