In ranking businesses in the local search results, Google's goal has always been to model the real world. It aims to reward the companies that are the most popular and prominent within their own market areas — those that are the most highly regarded by their customers, considered to among the best at what they do and that people generally patronize, talk well about and recommend to their friends. Those are the local businesses that Google wants to show in its local search results.
That’s what searchers want to see in their results, too! After all, no one wants to get awful or even so-so service if they can choose to use a business that has a history of making its customers very happy, instead. Whether people think you’re doing a stellar job or a stinky one, there’s no way to hide from your reputation anymore. Prospective buyers can now see the collective history of a business’s ability to keep its customers happy 24 hours a day via online reviews.
Why are reviews so important?
Depending on which survey you see, somewhere between 75% and 90% of consumers read online reviews when considering a purchase. A slightly smaller number of us trust online reviews as much as we trust recommendations made by people that we know.
While it may at first sound a little crazy, that trust is developed via our ability to read multiple opinions on a variety of websites made by a diverse group of people with differing standards and tastes. Then, while considering the public’s overall opinion of a business, we take into consideration the factors that are most important to us.
For example, a light sleeper may be more concerned about the noisiness of a hotel than they are about whether it offers a hot breakfast or a clean pool, and a traveler with an early flight may be looking at guests’ opinions of the reliability of a hotel’s airport shuttle service more than at any other amenity.
Moving beyond reputation management
Marketers have long used the term reputation management to refer to a company’s efforts to impact what prospective customers see about them online. Here’s Wikipedia’s definition of that term:
The practice of managing one’s online reputation has mainly consisted of getting more good reviews to help drown out the poor ones, owning the first page of the SERPs for brand name searches, and using the ability to respond to reviews on many sites as a method of damage control.
However, in 2015 and beyond, we need to think less about reacting appropriately to poor opinions and trying to reduce the visibility of bad online reviews. We need to concentrate on reputation development, instead.
Developing a better reputation
In the past, it wasn't hard to for a small business to survive and perhaps even thrive while providing poor to mediocre products and services. If there was enough foot traffic to a shop or office or store, or if it was in a good location, or if it did enough advertising in the places people used to find that type of business, new people would keep coming in the doors and buying from it — despite how bad it might actually be. While its customers might share their experiences with the people in their social circles, those circles were relatively small and word of mouth didn't travel very far unless extraordinary measures were taken.
However, in the age of the Internet, a business can no longer hide from its customers' opinions. We’re connected to each other online in ways that were not possible in the past. Most consumers have at least one mobile device with them at all times. We have our smartphones in our pockets and purses. They lie next to us while we sleep. We use them while we’re driving to be entertained and educated. We use them to communicate, get directions, and gather information, and we use them to find businesses to patronize and to learn about the experiences others have had there. People can read others’ opinions of local enterprises just about anytime and anywhere.
Reviews as a ranking factor
In the first years of local search, reviews weren’t much of a ranking factor. That changed in 2009 when Yelp rejected acquisition by Google. The search giant then made reviews a significant ranking factor in the local algorithm in order to incentivize small businesses to encourage more online reviews at Google.
We quickly suffered a plague of fake reviews and Google then had to take steps to reduce them. Among its tactics were the reduced impact of reviews on rankings, the development of a Yelp-like reviewer algorithm, and the requirement by Google+ to have a legitimate-looking profile in order to leave a review.
In 2015, reviews still have an impact on ranking in Google Maps and the local pack results, but the crowd-sourced opinion of local search practitioners pegs it at less than 9%. We can still get rating stars showing in some of the SERPs once we have 5–6 Google reviews, and it’s generally believed that 10 reviews left at Google provides a little bit of a ranking boost. Google may also be trying to incorporate review sentiment into its ranking algorithms. If and when this becomes a reality, Google will have come quite close to its goal of modeling the real world.
Beyond reviews as a ranking factor
While you should definitely take advantage of these features, we really need to look beyond rankings for motivation for getting reviews. Instead, we need to think about getting more and more good reviews over time in order to develop our reputation, rather than just managing it.
The newish Local Finder results shown below give users the opportunity to sort the results they see by ratings in some verticals. I anticipate that more industries will get this feature in the future, allowing us to choose just how good a local business must be before we’ll consider patronizing it. So, ranking well probably won’t do much for your enterprise unless those rankings are accompanied by ratings that are average (3 stars) at the very least.
People are also learning to search in better ways and many of them are asking to see the "best of something," rather than just "something." No one wants to go to an average or below-average oral surgeon, for example. If I need a root canal, I want the best dentist that I can find in my area to operate on me. And if I can’t find a good one in my town, I’ll likely be willing to travel elsewhere to be seen by a specialist that nearly everyone raves about.
Understanding Net Promoter Score
A company’s Net Promoter Score® is an easy way to determine how your reputation is developing over time. Customers are asked a single question: How likely is it that you would recommend [brand] to a friend or colleague?
A score is then calculated using a simple formula.
If the NPS increases over time, the company is doing a good job of keeping its customers satisfied, which is reflected in the body of online reviews about it and in the steady overall growth of the business.
While you may or may not wish to use Net Promoter Score® to assist you in improving your business, the idea behind it is a solid one. Actively ask for feedback from all of your customers. Then act on what you learn to constantly improve your products and services.
Refining the process allows you to quickly respond those who have complaints or concerns and to make things right before they get a chance to criticize you in public, while those who are happy with you can be encouraged to tell others about their experience, both on- and offline.
Contrary to what some business owners believe, most customers are not anxious to leave bad reviews. People tend to leave reviews only when their experience is exceptionally good or exceptionally bad. Mitigating bad experiences by sincerely asking for feedback and doing what’s needed to immediately make the customer happy is a fairly clear path to getting more good reviews and fewer bad reviews online.
Fixing problems takes more than talk
It’s easy to find examples that demonstrate how a business’ refusal to correct deficiencies when they’re brought to the staff’s attention can result in scathing reviews. It’s obviously much better to listen and correct a problem than it is to keep writing apologies for bad service. The hotel referred to in the examples below has dozens of reviews similar to this one commenting on poor experiences with its housekeeping department.
And the manager keeps writing insincere apologies that do nothing to reassure readers that the problem has been corrected.
A serious commitment to a cycle of continuous improvement based on customer feedback is what it takes to be one of the best businesses of its type in your area. This type of strategy will bring in more and more new customers over time and encourage past customers to return.
Google’s local algorithms have improved exponentially since 2004. Google wants to reward us online for being prominent and popular in the offline world, so we have to make sure our companies shine. Businesses that are unwilling to do so are doomed to a slow death because there’s no longer anywhere to hide from a bad reputation.
Best practices for reputation development
Get company-wide buy-in.
Everyone within the organization must be committed to asking for feedback from customers and sincerely listening for areas that can and should be improved. This needs to start at the top and flow through the entire organization. Always keep in mind that you have asked for ways to improve your business, so even the happiest customers are very likely to make suggestions. Take this as a positive, not a negative.
Problems should be identified and mitigated as soon after the customer has experience with the business as possible.
Ideally, that’s before the person leaves the business location or before the service provider leaves the location where work was performed. This is your best opportunity to learn from your customers and to delight them.
Provide a way for customers to complain right on your company’s website.
Even at the most conscientious businesses, people can have less-than-ideal experiences and sometimes people just need to vent, so give them a place to communicate with you away from the public eye. Closely monitor your on-site complaints and respond immediately.
Contact the customer soon after their visit with you to thank them and ask about their experience.
While a phone call is sometimes in order (such as with an oral surgeon checking up on a patient), in most cases, an email works fine. Send it out within a few days after the interaction asking about their experience and asking for suggestions on how it can be improved. Even those thrilled with their experience may have good ideas for your consideration.
Provide an appropriate response to the customer’s comments.
Address both their praise and concerns and thank them for helping you to improve your business.
Politely ask happy customers if you can use their comments or your website and if you can also include their name and photo.
Also suggest that they can help you and others by commenting on their positive experiences at popular online review sites. Provide links to your listing on several popular review sites to make it easy for them to do so.
Honestly address the concerns of those who had negative experiences.
Offer what you can to make it right and tell them what you plan to do to prevent it from happening again.
Take suggestions to heart.
Enthusiastically do what you can to continuously improve your business to satisfy the needs and wants of your clientele. In this way, you’ll always be improving your online and offline reputation and growing your business.
Resources
- Google My Business Help Forum – Google provides review monitoring and responses via its Google My Business dashboard.
- Moz Local provides a foundational education in online review development.
- 60+ Questions to Troubleshoot and Fix Your Local Reviews Strategy
How to Know If Your Local Reviews Strategy Works – Both of these articles from Phil Rosek will help you to understand and implement successful strategies for developing the online reputation of your local business. - Review Handout Generator from Whitespark provides us with an easy way to create handouts to encourage more reviews from happy customers.
- How to Do Review Audits That Turn Clients’ Worst Reviews Into Actionable Solutions – Miriam Ellis schools us on providing the tough love businesses often need to help them get their online reputation cleaned up quickly and effectively.
- How to Conduct an Online Patient Review Audit – Incredible Marketing’s advice on review audits for medical practitioners.
- GetFiveStars – A customizable platform that helps you to easily monitor, share and respond to reviews. Free trial.
- Review Trackers – An all-in-one dashboard for keeping an eye on reviews about you across the web. Provides multi-location monitoring and the ability to respond quickly to reviews. Demo and free trial.
- ReviewPush – A review request, monitoring, and reporting tool. Free trial.
Mary,
I'm seeing a lot more businesses welcoming the idea of being proactive as it regards actively bettering their reputations, in large part because they realize the popularity of reviews is unlikely to wane any time soon.
Thanks for sharing some excellent next steps.
RS
Thanks Ronell!
The bigger problem for most is that they're not getting reviews. What do you suggest?
@Greg Soliciting feedback needs to be baked into the business process. Not very many people are predisposed to leave reviews. You need to continually ask for them and using a review system can help immensely.
Mary, great article. For companies outside the US or multinational brands, you might want to add Reputation Aegis to your Reputation Marketing Platform list: we are multilingual, in Europe we comply to the Competition & Market Authorities Recommendations when collecting reviews, and we monitor reviews on over 500 review sites: in the US, Canada, The UK, Australia, France... and in 65 other countries!
Yes, this is happening to us too. I guess the only way to aquire these reviews is to asc the customer to review your listing, a thing that is not pleasant either for us to ask, nor for the customer to do.
I suppose most of the reviews i see here and there are reviews from friends and not from real customers, since almost all reviewed companies i see have 1~10 five star reviews.
Nice post. In order to take best advantage of review mechanism it is highly recommended you optimize your review system around your product and don't go always for that default all start rating and review system. Consider reviews as a tool to listen your customer's thoughts about you and your products. It will automatically start showcasing as a master tool of selling.
Hi Mary, thanks for the info! I trully believe that it's more important to answer politely a negative coment than to delete it. That way you show people how much you care about their opinions and respect them!
Awesome post Mary! The Net Promoter Score and Fruition's Check Your RepTool are fantastic resources.
Yes, It's right...positive reviews is also a more sale factor with good reputation & branding online. Positive reviews should be posted by real customers on your local business listing. Rankaroodirectoryscan.com also help to place your small business details on thousand local citation listing sites to improve your reputation.
Great article! I specially love the way you outline the "reputation development" concept. I am the founder of Feedb, a new web application made to help any business bake soliciting feedback into the business process. Some of the sites you list under resources are very similar to Feedb in many ways, you can take a look at getfeedb.com
We have a pre-launch list anybody can sign up to, and in a few weeks when we launch will have a free trial. Any feedback is greatly appreciated :)
Keep up the good work!
Nice information. As it is stated that reviews is a vital part for improving your online reputation, But My concern is how about when big companies purchase paid reviews to manipulate online reputation? Do you guys have any idea on it?
I think its hard to manage the reputation even many business try to do so. I quite agree, they must focus on improvement of service to gain good reputation, instead of managing.
Hi Mary, this is a really interesting article to read. At MyMovingReviews we try to educate moving companies on how to improve their reputation online.
As we have done a number of experiments, we concluded that reviews do influence ranking of both the website and the local results. I believe Google consolidated the review information from all the sources that they could crawl.
Nowadays in the social networking era, having a good reputation is a must for every business that aims for long-term success. This is why article like yours will definitely reach the ones that would like to do something about it.
A while ago I wrote an article about reputation management and review acquisition techniques in our blog: https://www.mymovingreviews.com/move/moving-reviews... and the article was written with the specific industry in mind.
I would love to see if you have any additional tips and tactics that could benefit transportation companies, because of the specifics of the business.
This was really great for both a person better understanding how reviews can impact a business brand, but also how to better manage them. I personally utilize reviews for my decision making when looking to use a business or try a product. I think that having a place directly on the site for reviews is great, but many of the sites like Yelp and others attempt to reward you by having many reviews which can turn into a brand nightmare if there are bad reviews. Either way being aware is one of the biggest factors to me and this post helped drive that even more thanks.
Helpful and informative article. Reviews are important for online reputation of business or service. Its better to ask for reason of negative review then to delete it.
Great! I will use this information for my fishing shop online, thank you very much friend
Thanks for mentioning ReviewTrackers, Mary. I manage the Content Marketing for our Blog, and I think this is one of the most thorough write-ups I've come across. I also especially love that you managed to tie-in Net Promoter Score. We utilized this system when we released our Feedback Request tool as a way to manage and track customer sentiment.
This is a great way to ensure our customers continue to receive new (positive) reviews. In our case studies, we've seen a 400% increase in just a few months.
In the new few weeks, we're releasing a huge update to this tool that will streamline the process, making it even more simple for our clients to get customer feedback.
Let me know if you have any questions, and I'd be happy to help.
Good Read, Thank you for sharing the fruitful insights!
Its true ... I get swayed by customer reviews on a host of things ... from products to services!
How negative of an impact would you say fake reviews have on a website? I run across a lot of cloned 5-star reviews on websites that pretty much dominate their local SERPs.
@Igor, The battle against fake reviews is ongoing. However, the risks greatly outweigh the rewards for those trying to build successful businesses online. They are not only against the guidelines of most sites that accept reviews, in many cases, they also cross over the line into being illegal and can result in heavy fines by the FTC or state regulatory agencies.
HI Mary Bowling,
I offer a excellent service and I wanna obtain positive reviews, the only way for obtain positive reviews is a blackboard in your online business? or are there another forms?
thank you for sharing.
@antoniocarmona I'm sorry, Anthony, I don't understand your question. Could you possibly rephrase it for me?
Mary,
Yes! Online Reputation Management is very sensitive and important step for any business. Business should very cognizant about it. If a business doesn't have any negative review, although it's a good thing but still they need to focus on Reputation Management to add extra security layer against negative search results in Google.
If you guys are looking for best tips on Reputation Management, I have written guide on How to remove negative search results. It's a detailed guide and hopefully you will find it very helpful.
Great read - very insightful!
Your reputation = your actions + what others say about you. I think that the small formula is the most effective and influential leverage you have both in business and in life. If you spend much time to properly establish and cultivate relationships online, you can be prepared with an army behind you to reach the subject when and if it does happen.
Very informative read, Mary!
Today, every business owners have to think a lot about their reputation.
This article gives the brief on how to create and leverage good impression to maintain strong reputation online. Also, the tools and reference links you have mentioned in the content are really helpful.
Local RankWatch also monitors the unlimited reviews on a weekly basis across listings and profiles.
[Link removed by editor.]
Thank you Martin Panayotov this was a good article. We also have moving reviews on our site https://www.movingauthority.com/movers-rating/Cali...
This link is to our California listing. Thank I hope to connect online in the future. Simon
hmmm, I'm just wondering, what if some sites are just using some dummy accounts to create good/bad reviews about their site/product, are those reviews valid or no? What are your thoughts?
Hello Mary,
I totally agreed with you blog title.Now a days every business owner wants to good Online Reputation Program but they just manage.Today time is to improve online reputation by regular activity.for online user trust all the above things are necessary.and review is the main factor .
For example we are searching best web development in USA so first we search in google or any other search engine "best website development & designing company in USA " and then check online reputation of website /brand .we also check rating,review and social media activity of that website.
Hey Mary, great article thanks. Recently I came across two different review options, one was that I got asked and could opt-in for a review while checkout and of course the standard way of just getting an email after a few days or a week. Would you recommend just sending an email for a review or is it better to let the customer decide by checking a checkbox?
What ever you and staff staff are willing and bale to do to encourage good online reviews, is what you should do. The same procedures won't work for every business, what ever you and your staff are willing and able to do to encourage good online reviews, is what you should do. Test to see what works best for your business.
It will be interesting if the conversion rate for Reviews will stay the same once customers can opt-in. I will try and see what happens. Thanks again for the article
Fantastic article, supera . I think many people trying to get into guest posting will learn a lot from this. The template is a great starting point as well. Well done!
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Nice post and good information you have shared to improve the reputation.
That's a good point about searchers using the qualitative data, rather than just the ranking, to make a decision. At least for me, bad reviews for unsubstantiated reasons tend to cancel each other out and convince me that I would like it, because only unsympathetic people don't like it :-)
In your suggestion to have a way to complain on the website, do you mean in an email, or in a publicly posted (though not as widely published) response? Seems like one would discourage feedback, and the other would discourage potential customers ready to book / buy.
@Amy A complaint form on the website should go immediately and directly to the business' owner or manager so that they have the opportunity to deal with the unhappy customer before they post their comments publicly somewhere else.
tankyou for message
Thanks for sharing such an informative post with us on the reputation management, online retailers always look for some guidance on how to improve and manage their reputation on the internet.
One of the best things which I liked about the post is the best practices section and particularly the 3rd one of “providing a way for customers to complain right on your company’s website”. Although online retailers should always be on their toes in providing best buying experience to avoid any negative feedback of their services/ products.
I have gone through an interesting post on Search engine Land of “how a person got a federal prison for SEO extortion”. A guy named Stanly extorted individuals and companies by threatening to engage in illegitimate SEO work: posting “fraudulent comments and creating negative reviews online, if the victim did not pay him a certain sum of money.”
To go through the full story please visit the below link.
https://searchengineland.com/seo-sentenced-to-37-months-in-federal-prison-for-extortion-239706