More Google reviews mean a higher local ranking, more trust, and more customers. Yet most local businesses have a fraction of the reviews they could — not because customers are unhappy, but because nobody asks. Here's how to fix that, the right way.
Timing is everything. The best moment to ask for a review is right after a positive experience — when the meal was great, the repair worked, the appointment went well. Wait a day and the enthusiasm fades. Ask in the moment and people happily oblige.
Every extra step loses people. A customer who has to search for your business, find the review section, and sign in will usually give up. The fix: hand them a direct link or a QR code that opens straight to the review screen. One tap, done.
The businesses with hundreds of reviews aren't lucky — they ask every single customer, every single time. The trick is making it a system rather than something you remember to do. Automating the request removes the human bottleneck entirely.
Replying to reviews — good and bad — signals to Google and to customers that you're active and care. A thoughtful reply to a 5-star review encourages more; a calm, helpful reply to a critical one shows future customers how you handle problems.
It's fine to give an unhappy customer a private way to reach you first — but never block or hide honest reviews. Google prohibits selectively soliciting only positive reviews. The compliant approach: collect private feedback, resolve issues, and still invite everyone to review publicly.
GoDigitalVantage automates everything in this article — collecting reviews by QR, SMS and email, routing unhappy customers privately, and replying with AI. See how it works →