Two dates to know: August 4, 2010 – the day Google enabled owner responses to Google My Business reviews; November 17, 2016 – the day Moz enabled incredibly easy GMB owner response functionality in the Moz Local dashboard. Why are these noteworthy events in Local Search history?
Because reviews and owner responses are direct reputation management, free marketing, free advertising, damage control, and quality control all wrapped up in one multi-voice song about your brand.
What’s missing from the picture of this free-for-all of voices caroling sentiment about your brand? You are — the conductor! If you’re not leading the tune — from setting customer service policies, to training staff, to managing complaints, to engaging directly with consumers online — you're giving up available reputation management controls.
Make no mistake: No brand can prevent every sour note, but with owner response functionality, you can not only retune relationships with valuable customers, but can also protect revenue by keeping those customers instead of having to invest 25x as much in obtaining new ones. Owner response mastery is, indeed, smart business.
For the past six years, since Google launched owner responses as part of its local product, I’ve been studying them and acting as a consultant to a variety of local business owners and agencies regarding effective usage of this remarkable capability. Today, in celebration of Moz Local’s support of this function, I’m going to break down the types of reviews into 5 categories and offer you my tips for skilled management. With reputation and revenue on the line, every local brand needs an intelligent strategy!
Getting up-to-speed on owner responses
During our recent launch, a Moz community member let us know he'd never heard of owner responses before, so real quick: Many review platforms give you the option, as the business owner, to respond to reviews your customers have left you. This is normally done from within your dashboard on that platform, or, in some cases, via mobile apps.
In the Moz Local dashboard, the Google My Business owner response function is a real time-saver. We alert you when new reviews come in, and you simply click the ‘reply’ link to write your response. A little form pops up in which you can type away handily:
Now let’s delve into responding to the five basic types of reviews most local brands can expect to receive.
Type 1: “I love you!”
Real-world example:
Diagnosis: This is the customer every brand wants to have: the delighted evangelist who goes to the lengths of saying that nothing else on the local scene can compare to what the business offers. Honestly, reviews like this are like beautiful greeting cards validating that your business is getting it right on all points. Pure music to your ears!
Owner response strategy:
Many business owners ask if it’s necessary to respond to positive reviews. My short answer is yes, if you wish your business to come across as courteous and engaged. Part of conducting the flow of your reputation is acknowledging customer satisfaction and thanking them for the time they invest in writing such nice things about your company. It’s just good manners.
Having said this, I’ll qualify it by mentioning scale. If your enterprise has 100+ locations which each have 100+ positive Google My Business reviews, responding to every single one may not be the best use of your resources. Prevent the appearance of ungrateful neglect by aiming for a percentage — maybe 10% — of ‘thank yous’ in response to your best reviews.
Pro tips:
- Your thanks can be brief, but avoid repetitiousness. Write a unique response each time. There are owner response profiles out there that have made me strongly suspect robots manage them, as in ‘thank you for your review’ written on 30 different responses. Avoid that.
- Remember that owner responses are content consumers read. They are, in essence, free advertising space. Don’t go over the top with this, but if a customer mentions something they love, latch onto that. In our sample review above, the owner could mention that comments like this one inspired them to bottle their hot sauce for retail sales, or they could mention that they actually just won a best-in-Bay-Area award from X publication. Think products, services, and hyperlocal/local terminology. No, don’t put the hard sell on the customer in the owner response, but use this real estate with savvy. If there’s something you think a happy customer would be excited to know, promote it in a nice, friendly way!
- Positive reviews indicate that a customer is already in a good, receptive mood. The more personable your owner response, the more of an impression your business can make, encouraging the customer to come back for more. Here, company culture, personality, and fun can shine. Your customer thinks you are special — act like it in the response.
Suggested owner response:
Hi Charley!
We were just thrilled by your review — in fact, we showed it to Chef Rosa, because the pique sauce you love is based on her grandmother’s traditional recipe brought from Puerto Rico in the 1930s. It’s the real deal, and we’re actually offering it bottled for retail now right next to the hostess stand at both our San Rafael and San Francisco locations, based on diner requests. Hint: one secret ingredient is apple cider vinegar, but that’s all we can say! We’d love to see you back soon, and Chef Rosa says, “Thank you for the lovely compliment.” ‘Best in the Bay Area’ makes us all proud!
Good Eating!
Marta Sanchez, Owner
Type 2: “My mind isn’t made up yet.”
Real-world example:
Diagnosis: A 3-star rating is the hallmark of the consumer who likes some things about your business, but isn’t totally loyal yet. They may/may not return and may/may not recommend you to others. Undecided patrons represent an exciting challenge to transform dissatisfactory aspects of your business and specific consumer sentiment, all at the same time.
Owner response strategy:
The honesty of a less-than-5-star review, when written in detail, delivers two valuable assets to your brand: it tells you where you're hitting and where you're missing, giving you the opportunity to improve and turn a lukewarm consumer into a loyal one.
Strategy for the owner response involves thanking for praise, accepting responsibility for faults, apologizing for disappointments, and making some kind of an offer. This offer, meant to sweeten the pitch that you hope the consumer will give your company a second chance, could be a comp or a coupon for future use, or it could simply be an explanation of how you have heard their feedback and made changes.
Pro tips:
- Express gratitude for consumer complaints — they are valuable. Do not attempt to shift blame onto anyone else, including the customer or staff members.
- Document both the positive and negative sentiment of so-so reviews and use it as your playbook for keeping what’s good and improving what isn’t excellent.
- Be sure the customer feels heard. Cite their complaints back to them. By doing so, you are demonstrating to all future potential customers that your brand is responsive to feedback.
Suggested owner response:
Dear Yesenia,
We’re so grateful to you for letting us know that our prices, staff, and in-hotel restaurants pleased you, and, I also want to express my thanks to you for mentioning that the housekeeping wasn’t exceptional. I need to hear that, and take full responsibility for the dusty room. I have been trying a variety of cleaning services this past year, with the goal of finding the best.
While I want to be sure that every guest knows we honor any requests during their stay (just dial 9 on your in-room phone), I also want to let you know that, based on your comments, I held an all-staff meeting with our current cleaning service and have issued a new 10-point cleaning checklist (including dusting all surfaces) for each housekeeper. Should you honor us with a second stay, I personally guarantee you will find your room immaculate, and I would also like to offer your party a free breakfast in the Palm Room, as you enjoyed our restaurants. Just tell them Rob sent you, and it will be our pleasure to serve you! Thank you for your valuable and honest review.
Cordially,
Rob Brown, Owner
Type 3: “There was hair in my taco...”
Real-world example:
Diagnosis: The dreaded 1-star review! The customer has a specific, legitimate complaint, and your job as the owner is to address their dissatisfaction, take responsibility, and, whenever possible, make an offer to make things right. A negative review is likely the last life preserver an unhappy customer will throw you — a last chance to earn them back with superior responsiveness. Given the cost of replacing them, rewards for the effort can be great. When a customer ‘saves you’ by making their complaints known, an adept response from you may ‘save them’ in return, earning their repeat business.
Pro tips:
- Apologize!!! Say the words, “I’m sorry, I apologize.”
- No blame shifting, no lectures — just total accountability, humility, and a willingness to learn.
- Be as honest as possible about whatever circumstance led to the customer’s bad experience, and state what you're doing to improve that circumstance. Sometimes, the circumstances may include faults on the customer’s part. If you have to mention these in order to be honest, do so with great care and no blame, as in the sample response below.
- Negative reviews often run on for agonizing paragraphs and chapters, but your response should not. Be thorough, but concise.
- Offer something, even if it’s just a few minutes of your time on the phone, to try to make it right.
- Aim for a ‘wow’ factor — as in you want future potential customers to say, “Wow, this business really cares!” when they read the response.
- For more tips on managing negative reviews, please read Diagramming The Story of a 1 Star Review.
- Document all complaints; they are incredibly valuable both in terms of damage control and quality control. Consider doing a full review audit on a set schedule to catch emerging problems and resolve them.
Suggested owner response:
Dear Vivi,
This is Dr. Tom, and I want to begin by apologizing for the inconvenience you experienced. I hate to think of you having wasted both time and gas on this. I’m so sorry.
I regret that you missed the message about hours for the shot clinic on our homepage, and your review has made me concerned that other patients may be missing it, too. Thanks for alerting me to this. Here’s what we’ve done:
- Enlarged the homepage hours message + included those hours in the header of every website page
- Put this at the top of our Facebook page
- Updated our off-hours phone message to include the info that folks need to come in by 3:00 to ensure walk-in service.
Will you give me a second chance to make this right for you? It’s so important that your pet gets proper shots. Please phone and let my receptionist know Dr. Tom is offering you a priority appointment, any day of the week, and I’d like to make friends with your pup by treating him to one of our wonderful new chew toys. Hoping to have the great pleasure of caring for you and your awesome companion animal!
Kindly,
Dr. Tom
Type 4: “I’m actually your competitor.”
Real-world example:
Diagnosis: Unfortunately, fake reviews happen. They may stem from unscrupulous competitors, disgruntled past employees, or individuals with personal grudges against someone at the company. The line to walk here is whether the reviews are simply false (warranting a response + Google action) or citing such defamatory or illegal practices that you should consult with a lawyer before taking any further action. Our real-world example is of the former kind — it illustrates what a fake review might look like with sentiment that is negative but not accusing the business of criminal activity.
Pro tips:
- If research has made you aware that a review has been left by a competitor or by someone who is not a customer, that’s a violation of Google’s Review Policy.
- First, leave a brief owner response to the review (as shown in my sample response below) to alert consumers to the falsity of the review. Note: I don’t advise ‘outing’ the bad actor — it’s not professional.
- Second, follow Google’s steps for flagging the review. I suggest waiting 24 hours after doing this before moving on.
- Next, on that same page, you will see options for speaking directly with Google via phone, chat, or email. Contact Google to let them know about the fake review you have flagged. Hopefully, they will be able to rectify this for you and remove the review.
- However, if you get a rep who doesn’t seem to understand your issue, turn to the Google My Business Community, post the complete details of your scenario, and beg for a Top Contributor to help escalate your issue.
- Don’t expect a quick fix. You may have to be persistent to obtain resolution.
- But, again, please don’t take these steps if a review accuses your business of something illegal. We’ll cover that, below, in Type 5.
Suggested owner response:
To Our Valued Customers,
Sadly, after researching this, our company discovered that this review was left by a competitor. We are taking the appropriate steps to report this to Google, and we hope having this fake review removed will encourage this unfortunate competitor to seek other, more honest forms of promoting his business. If he persists, we will engage appropriate legal counsel.
SMH,
Jim Davis, Owner
Type 5: “I’m citing illegal stuff.”
Real-world example:
Diagnosis: Whether a negative review is true or false, any time illegal or dangerous behavior is cited, it’s a cue to you that you need to speak with an attorney before taking any further steps. Don’t respond and don’t attempt to have the review removed, as both could be used as evidence in a court of law. Seek an attorney well-versed in cyber law and act on his or her advice, rather than on any advice you may read on the Internet or receive from marketers, friends, etc. And if you run an SEO agency, I urge you not to advise clients on Type 5 reviews — we’re SEOs, not attorneys, and shouldn’t be consulting on legal matters.
Orchestrating the ideal owner response environment
If you already have an excellent customer service training program in place at your business, chances are good that you will mostly be managing Type 1 and Type 2 reviews with only the occasional Type 3. Types 4 and 5 will hopefully be the exception rather than the rule. Given that one 2016 survey found that 57% of consumer complaints relate to employee behavior, we can estimate that at least half of your reputation is anchored to the quality of your staff hiring and training practices. So, definitely place first and fundamental focus there, and then manage the ensuing consumer sentiment as it flows in with these tips:
- Observe the typical rate at which you normally receive reviews. It could be a few per week, or if you’re managing multiple locations, numerous reviews per day.
- What you observe dictates how frequently you need to monitor your reviews. If you’re a Moz Local customer, we’ll conveniently alert you as each new review comes in, and you can check that as often as makes sense.
- Avoid unnecessary customer frustration and bad reviews stemming from bad data. There must be literally millions of negative reviews on the web citing wrong phone numbers, wrong hours of operations, wrong addresses. Do a quick citation health check to see if your major local business listings are fomenting negative sentiment. Correct problems.
- I’ve seen various theories about how quickly an owner should respond to reviews; my own opinion is ASAP, particularly when it comes to Type 2 and Type 3 reviews. If you are trying to catch complaints for the purpose of resolving them and winning back unhappy customers, there may be circumstances (like our example with the puppy shots) that make it vital to respond quickly to avoid customer loss.
- While it may be ideal to have owners be the authors of all owner responses, scale may make that an untenable situation. If you are designating a staff member or marketer to represent the owner, prevent mistakes by clearly outlining company policies, voice, permissions, and objectives with that person.
- Responsiveness can be a competitive difference maker. Observe your direct competitors; if they are careless about active management of reviews, you can take advantage by making your brand the one that always responds, demonstrating care and accessibility.
- Know that expert owner responders experience thrilling victories, like having an unhappy customer update their review and raise their star ratings after receiving a great owner reply. These are rewards that make the input of effort well worth it!
Six years into Google’s rollout of the owner response function, I still encounter many business owners expressing fear of reviews. At the root of this, I often find that they feel powerless and overwhelmed by the prospect of managing their brand’s reputation.
It’s my hope that this post signals to every local business owner that you do, indeed, have significant power in this regard. Via the the right combination of skilled customer service and active review management, you can orchestrate an exceptional online reputation for your brand in concert with your customers, in harmony with your professional goals and dreams.
Excellent advice. Any suggestions for how business owners should respond to reviews that mention competitors by name? "Go to XYZ instead, they offer a better level of service for a cheaper price"
Hi UKBB!
Great question! If you've determined the reviews are legitimate (not like TYPE 4, left by a competitor) then here are some suggestions:
- If they mention price, the business might want to consider a price-matching offer. If they would implement one, the owner could respond with, "Want to be sure you know that we offer price-matching + we have 'X' good thing that you won't find elsewhere".
- If they are simply remarking that the service is superior elsewhere, then these are type of comments the business must take to heart. Respond honestly that you want to know what, specifically, it is about the service at that competitor that the consumer values, so that your business can meet and exceed expressed wishes. If the consumer has mentioned something specific in their review (Competitor gets you your food faster, has a nicer lobby, is more friendly), take that to heart as the owner, and make improvements, and let the user know what you're doing to improve.
Either of these could be useful and very responsive/tuned-in owner response strategies.
Any review that mentions a competitor is technically violating the GMB reviews policy -- by advertising for another company. You should be able to flag those and get them removed.
Hi Scott,
I'm not familiar with that language in these guidlelines: https://support.google.com/business/answer/2622994... Would you be able to share the source on this? Thanks.
Hi Miriam, thanks for this extremely detailed guide. I once worked as a marketing manager for a small business at the start of my career. So whenever we got a good review on social media or wherever, my boss told me to just ignore it. "Why bother, if they already like us?" - he said. Turns out, it does matter to reply to such reviews.
A-ha! Sounds like you've had experience of something I was specifically addressing here. Glad to know your real-world scenario checks out with what I've written. Confirmation! Thanks for taking the time to read and comment, Stacey.
And thanks for mapping out the responses, Miriam. Will definitely use them from now on!
This was genuinely a really insightful article. I'm going to put this into practice at my work tomorrow morning and start focusing a lot more attention on responding to customer reviews for my clients.
At the moment, I have a few clients who straight up avoid customer reviews and hopefully this can persuade them to start responding to reviews whether they are 1 star or 5. The trouble for me is, half of my clients are plumbers, electricians and builders who just don't have the time and the other half are beauticians, hairdressers, dog groomers and b&b owners who take the time out of their evenings to respond to reviews. If only they all put the time in!
Brilliant write up and I thoroughly enjoyed it <---- My own review ;)
Hi Dean!
Thank you for leaving 'your own review' ... and see, here I am responding to it ;) You raise such a good point about this, namely, that it is tough for many SMB owners to make time for this task. If they are already inundated with as much business as they can handle (are plumbers ever not booked?), then it may be challenging to get them to see the value of this work. But if, like most SMBs, they need a constant stream of new transactions, then the value of developing their reputation becomes clearer.
After all, think of how costly Adwords can be in some verticals, where you are paying for every pixel of screen space you receive. Well, here's some free screen space, courtesy of Google, to shine in, and while its visibility doesn't equal that of PPC, mention that some studies estimate that 92% of consumers now read reviews when trying to figure out who to trust. If the owner is there, demonstrating accessibility and trustworthiness, he's going to get quite a few eye balls on that free screen space, eh?
I'm so gratified that this article may help you spark new enthusiasm in your client base for exploring owner responses. I appreciated your thoughtful comment very much!
Miriam, I love the concept of comparing the review to Google's PPC rates and want to expand on it. Example: Mr Customer, You have a #5Star review that equals in square inches the size of a PPC ad that costs $50 per click. And your review remains live even after you've depleted you PPC ad budget, so lets value the review at $100. If you respond to the review you double the space and double the value. Too mathy?
Ha, no, not too mathy, Julie! Good stuff! :)
Great post Miriam! Either not responding to reviews or leaving a very poor response is a very common trend I see with small businesses, so this is a fantastic write up. I like the examples you've included, so hopefully this can be a good resource for consultants and small business owners alike :)
Hey Eric!
So glad you enjoyed this, and I've seen just what you've mentioned. There appear to me to be far more cases of neglected, rather than managed, review profiles in my own city, and it cities all over the country. Given the benefits of management (free marketing, customer service, etc.) it's clear that many businesses aren't yet aboard. I hope 2017 may bring some improvement in this area.
I have been preaching that businesses need to be responding to their reviews for quite some time. Typically, I have found that people who have issues with their reviews sticking solve that with owner responses almost immediately. And with the Google My Business app notifications and an email, frankly you really have no reason not to be doing it other than you are lazy. Imagine if your customers were the same, then you wouldn't have all those pretty stars you like to brag about to your competition.
Hey Clint!
That's really interesting about reviews sticking better with responses. Is that on specific platforms? I'd love to hear more about it, as it's not something I've seen surfaced before.
And, yep, being a lazy-bones is no excuse. Haha. Thanks for the great comment!
Miriam this is gold! I liked the vet example because that still shifted some responsibility to the customer, since they missed the message about shot hours, and still showed how the vet was seeking to improve the visibility of the hours. Great examples.
Hey Dave,
Sorry for the delayed reply to your very nice comment. I've been recovering from the flu (yuck!). Glad you liked the vet example. I was aiming for a way to point out that a resource did, in fact exist, that the customer overlooked, while doing it without blaming the customer in a rude way (which is never a good idea!). Appreciate you taking the time read.
Much appreciated information. Especially type number four and the extra steps beyond flagging a review. Thanks.
Thanks Miriam, this was really useful and quite detailed. Will be useful to every business owner out there.
I was reading a similar article yesterday about responding to reviews on GMB. They briefly touched on my question, but didn't really satisfy my need for an answer! What percentage of reviews should you respond to, if it's less than 100%, does it vary by type?
Hi Caleb,
Please take a look again at Type 1 in my post, above, and the section within that subtitled Owner Response Strategy. I've tried to address this there.
I've always been of the train of thought that it's best to give a short response that directs people to call customer service if they've got an issue. Likewise, even if they wax lyrical about you it's still best practice to keep it short so you don't end up saying too much.
Hi Simon,
Interesting idea, but with this approach, I think one thing is missing: the rest of the public doesn't get to be on that phone call. By being brave enough to showcase your owner response skills in public, you are teaching potential new customers how they can expect to be treated by your business. Conversely, if you respond to a public review with a private-only response, it might almost seem like the business has something it's trying to hush up. Given the public nature of reviews, I'd advocate courage in responding publicly, with confidence!
Really i was wondering how to respond to customers reviews. Thanks for sharing very useful article on managing reviews.
Thank you. This turned out to be a lot more interesting and useful than I expected (poor judgmental skills, I know).
1-star reviews seem to be a real pain, thanks for explaining how to handle those, especially the competitor ones. I think if I saw a response like that I would side with the listing's owner.
Yay! Glad to know the post exceeded your initial expectation, Igor. Awfully nice to know. Thanks.
Very nice post! Thanks for all the info :D!
Very helpful and interesting post. Thank you!!
I like the post, the information is very useful. Thank you!