Tommy Glasgow, Author at Go Fish Digital https://gofishdigital.com/blog/author/tommy/ Wed, 17 Jan 2024 14:58:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6 https://gofishdigital.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/cropped-gfdicon-color-favicon-1-32x32.png Tommy Glasgow, Author at Go Fish Digital https://gofishdigital.com/blog/author/tommy/ 32 32 The 5 Best Online Reputation Monitoring Tools https://gofishdigital.com/blog/5-overlooked-places-to-monitor-your-online-reputation-in-2020/ https://gofishdigital.com/blog/5-overlooked-places-to-monitor-your-online-reputation-in-2020/#respond Fri, 15 Sep 2023 19:15:22 +0000 https://gofishdigital.com/5-overlooked-places-to-monitor-your-online-reputation-in-2020/ Is Online Reputation Management part of your business objectives? It’s more important than ever to put your best foot forward for potential clients, partners, and employees by fostering a positive online presence.  Good online reputation management for your brand starts with search results and online review sites. The majority of our digital reputation management projects here […]

The 5 Best Online Reputation Monitoring Tools is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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Is Online Reputation Management part of your business objectives? It’s more important than ever to put your best foot forward for potential clients, partners, and employees by fostering a positive online presence. 

Good online reputation management for your brand starts with search results and online review sites. The majority of our digital reputation management projects here at Go Fish Digital revolve around suppressing negative search results and review site rating improvement. Optimizing these areas is a good start for taking control of how your brand is perceived.

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But there are other places where negative sentiment about your brand may be showing up. If online reputation management is going to be a focus for you or your business, it’s important to develop a strategy for these often-overlooked channels. 

1. Autocomplete & Related Search

Before a searcher even gets to your SERPs, they will be greeted by a search engine’s Autocomplete predictions. Rest assured that a negative phrase like “complaints”, “scam” or “lawsuit” appearing here is going to immediately influence the reputation of your brand.

Don’t overlook the “Related Search” section either. Although these predictions appear at the bottom of the SERP on Google and Bing, a curious user will stumble across these terms – which are often different from the Autocomplete phrases. 

The exact algorithm for how these predictions are pulled is difficult to unpack. But we do know that factors like search volume, recency of searches, and location of the searcher are part of the equation. We work with clients on developing a content and optimization plan to increase the frequency of positive phrases we see in Autocomplete, influencing the predictions as much as possible to replace negative keywords.  

2. People Also Ask Boxes

People Also Ask has been a hot topic in the SEO world for the past few years, but it’s often overlooked as a reputation indicator. Just like Autocomplete, the predictions here can help shape public perception. We’ve seen questions related to product recalls, workplace safety, bad press and everything in between pop up. This SERP feature is appearing more and more frequently, yet is often skimmed past when brand managers are monitoring online sentiment.

We’ve found a few useful strategies for converting or suppressing negative People Also Ask questions with schema and third-party content. As part of your ORM dashboard, it pays to keep tabs on what’s appearing in this section of relevant SERPs. 

Have a question about People Also Ask from an SEO or ORM perspective? Feel free to contact our team by following the link at the end of this post. 

3. Video Carousels

While we’re on the topic of SERP features, we need to talk about video carousels. Your brand’s YouTube channel may already be full of product/service overviews, workplace culture highlights, customer testimonials, and other reputation-building content. But not all of these videos are guaranteed to appear in a carousel. We’ve seen businesses with sterling reputations be victimized by an angry YouTuber or past customer who airs their frustrations in a video. With the right title or view count, these videos can leapfrog your owned content and appear on the first page of search results. 

Our strategy here is to promote existing videos or create new ones that can eventually suppress a negative target at least outside the first three videos in a carousel. That takes an attention-grabbing and keyword-optimized title, useful information for the viewer, and distribution that will garner maximum views. 

4. Social & Web Mentions

Ok, so you’ve nailed down your search rankings, autocomplete, review sites, and any other unique SERP features. What about monitoring the chatter of past, present, and future customers online? After all, any dialogue on your social channels is another opportunity for people to weigh in on your brand. Maybe you already have a go-to social media person on the team who can answer any questions on Facebook or Twitter, but what about conversations happening outside of your owned social channels?

It’s important to monitor untagged brand mentions or anything outside the purview of your own pages. Tools like Awario and BuzzSumo are great for picking up mentions of your brand on Facebook groups, subreddits, online message boards and everything in between. For anything else, old standbys like Google Alerts or a page monitoring tool like VisualPing are simple and free ways to catch and address a reputation threat before it gets worse. 

5. Glassdoor/Indeed

Employee review sites like Glassdoor and Indeed seem like obvious places to try and control your company’s reputation. However, we’ve seen plenty of organizations who believe that, unless a searcher is a job-seeker, star ratings and reviews on these sites don’t really matter. The truth is that everything a searcher sees online factors into their perception of the brand, and Glassdoor and Indeed almost always rank high for searches of business names. A company that values its employees is likely to value its customers. 

There are a few different ways to improve star ratings here. Both Glassdoor and Indeed encourage employers to request reviews, and Glassdoor even provides free email templates for obtaining new reviews from different employee groups. We also use our knowledge of these sites’ review guidelines in order to re-verify or remove certain negative reviews. 

With these overlooked areas on your radar, your ORM strategy will be much more comprehensive in the new year. For more tips and tricks, or to learn how Go Fish Digital can help your brand improve its reputation, you can contact us here.

The 5 Best Online Reputation Monitoring Tools is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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How to Optimize Your BBB Business Profile https://gofishdigital.com/blog/how-to-optimize-your-bbb-business-profile/ https://gofishdigital.com/blog/how-to-optimize-your-bbb-business-profile/#respond Tue, 06 Jul 2021 13:00:06 +0000 https://gofishdigital.com/how-to-optimize-your-bbb-business-profile/ While popular online review platforms like Google and Yelp get most of the fanfare and attention from consumers, one of the oldest indicators for public trust is the Better Business Bureau. The BBB has operated in one form or another for over 100 years. Despite its age, the site still carries weight — especially with […]

How to Optimize Your BBB Business Profile is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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While popular online review platforms like Google and Yelp get most of the fanfare and attention from consumers, one of the oldest indicators for public trust is the Better Business Bureau. The BBB has operated in one form or another for over 100 years. Despite its age, the site still carries weight — especially with older customers — and tends to have a stickiness in search results, likely built off years of credibility. 

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Where simplicity is key for something like Google Reviews, BBB’s old-school style can make it a bit challenging to understand. Here is a quick and dirty guide to understanding the basics of BBB and how your business can leverage it to benefit online reputation management.

What Is the Better Business Bureau (BBB)?

The Better Business Bureau (BBB) is an independent ratings and review site that seeks to measure the trustworthiness and integrity of businesses. It is divided into several regional chapters, each overseeing businesses located in that region. 

Each BBB business profile includes two primary metrics: a letter grade awarded by the BBB based on their assessment of overall reliability, and a star rating average of all customer reviews left on that particular BBB profile. 

The BBB also awards select businesses with BBB accreditation, should they meet certain criteria. More on that below. 

Due to the Better Business Bureau’s authoritativeness, extensive list of businesses, and strict ratings system, it is one of the most important online review platforms for businesses to manage properly.

Resolving Complaints

Complaints (i.e. negative reviews) on BBB are damaging to businesses in two ways. Not only will they drag down the average star rating of your businesses, but as complaints add up and/or go unresolved for long periods of time, BBB will demote the letter grade rating of a business as well. 

When a new customer complaint is submitted, BBB will direct the business to respond within 14 days. You may respond to the BBB regarding a complaint through an online complaint system, mail, fax, or email. 

Working with the BBB to “close” a complaint (lessening the complaint’s damage to your business letter grade rating) can result in one of the following closing statuses:

  1. Resolved: The reviewer verified the issue was resolved to their satisfaction.
  2. Answered: The business addressed the issues within the complaint, but the consumer either a) did not accept the response or b) did not notify the BBB of their satisfaction.
  3. Unresolved: The business responded to the dispute but failed to make a good faith offer to resolve it. 
  4. Unanswered: The business failed to respond to the dispute.
  5. Unpursuable: BBB is unable to locate the business.

When it comes to resolving or answering a complaint on BBB, Go Fish Digital recommends a few best practices:

  • Respond in a timely manner, within 48 hours if possible, and no more than 14 days after the review is published.
  • Address the reviewer personally, by name if possible. 
  • Acknowledge their specific complaint. Do not respond with a generic, scripted response. 
  • Thank them for their feedback, and apologize for the negative experience.
  • Restate that the issue conflicts with your business’s core principles. 

Utilizing Your Local BBB Chapter

One benefit to using the BBB is their business support. Unlike Yelp and Google, which can send you on a wild goose chase just to get a simple answer about removing a review or updating your profile, BBB’s regional setup can be an advantage when used properly.

Connecting our clients with their local BBB representatives has helped to resolve complaints, answer questions about accreditation, and remove business profile pages. The system isn’t perfect (a few BBB regional reps serving hundreds of businesses can result in some long delays in communication), but having a specific contact is a massive improvement compared to other platforms. 

Use the BBB Directory to identify the proper BBB contact for your region, and get in touch with them to take advantage of their knowledge.

BBB Ratings: Star Ratings vs. Letter Grades

Something that can confuse consumers on BBB is the difference between a business’s star rating and letter grade rating. Sometimes, a business can boast a strong letter grade and weak star rating, or vice versa.

Remember, the BBB star rating is the average rating of all customer reviews left on that particular business profile page. The letter grade is an overall judgment of trust assigned by the BBB based on factors like complaint history, time in business, and any known legal issues. Here you can review the full list of BBB rating factors.

The BBB assigns a numerical value to each of their 10+ rating factors, which are weighted by importance, to obtain an overall point score between 0 and 100. A business that scores 94 and above on that scale achieves the coveted A to A+ grade. Businesses that fall short of 60 total points are given an F grade. 

Pay special attention to the “Reasons for BBB Rating” linked below a business’s letter grade on the profile page. This provides specific information on rating penalties that can be useful for business owners and customers alike. 

BBB Reasons for Letter Grade Rating

BBB Accreditation 

There is no subject related to BBB that prompts more questions than accreditation. Is accreditation a magic pill that resolves all BBB issues? Is it an overrated badge of honor? Is BBB accreditation expensive? These are all good questions. 

First and foremost, BBB accreditation does not guarantee your business an A+ grade from the Better Business Bureau, nor does it protect you from negative customer reviews. 

To become eligible for accreditation, businesses must meet the criteria in BBB’s Accreditation Standards. These businesses naturally tend to also have positive reviews and are in good standing with the BBB. However, just working with your local BBB chapter on becoming accreditation-eligible will also raise your BBB letter grade since so many of the best practices for a positive grade and accreditation overlap. 

So how much does BBB accreditation cost? You will have to check with your local BBB chapter since pricing varies between regions, but pricing is based on the number of employees and usually ranges from about $500/year for the smallest companies and up to $1,500/year for companies with a few hundred employees. For larger corporations, yearly accreditation membership fees can be in the tens of thousands.

That begs the question, is BBB accreditation worth it? Primary benefits of accreditation include:

  • Online and print assets confirming your badge of trust with the BBB
  • Inclusion in BBB’s online directory when users search for “accredited only” businesses
  • Access to exclusive business support services and tools

Conclusion

Ultimately, businesses must weigh the cost of an annual accreditation with the benefits the extra endorsement provides. In many cases, an “A” grade from the BBB and a positive average star rating from customers is enough to earn consumer trust. 

For businesses with an older clientele or in a particularly competitive industry, accreditation may still be worth the yearly cost. Speak with your local BBB chapter about resolving any outstanding complaints associated with your business or to learn more about exact pricing.

With these tips at your disposal, BBB can turn from an often-ignored review site to one that attracts new customers and helps fortify your brand’s reputation.

How to Optimize Your BBB Business Profile is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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How to Improve Reviews for Multiple-Location Businesses https://gofishdigital.com/blog/how-to-improve-reviews-for-multiple-location-businesses/ https://gofishdigital.com/blog/how-to-improve-reviews-for-multiple-location-businesses/#respond Mon, 13 Jul 2020 05:00:28 +0000 https://gofishdigital.com/how-to-improve-reviews-for-multiple-location-businesses/ One of the most fundamental parts of your brand’s online reputation is customer reviews. Having a strategy in place for monitoring, responding to, and requesting new online reviews can feel like a full-time job, even for a small business. But what about national or multi-location businesses? The prospect of keeping tabs on hundreds of reviews […]

How to Improve Reviews for Multiple-Location Businesses is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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One of the most fundamental parts of your brand’s online reputation is customer reviews. Having a strategy in place for monitoring, responding to, and requesting new online reviews can feel like a full-time job, even for a small business. But what about national or multi-location businesses? The prospect of keeping tabs on hundreds of reviews across Yelp, Google, or industry-specific sites can sound dizzying. 

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That was the challenge Go Fish Digital summarized in a recent case study (you can view and download the case study PDF by clicking here). Online review management for franchises or multiple location businesses presents its own set of obstacles, but we found these strategies to be the most helpful. 

Flagging Reviews at “Striking Distance” Locations

Flagging negative reviews for removal is one of our favorite ways to quickly improve a business’s star rating. What you’ll need is knowledge of a review site’s content guidelines, and a detail-oriented team to sift through the reviews and find flagging opportunities. Some violations we often see for larger businesses include review-spamming multiple locations or reviews based on second-hand experiences. 

Using tools like our Yelp Calculator, we identify which locations are within striking distance of the next-highest star rating (usually within 1 or 2 reviews). We start with these pages to try and uncover any flaggable negative reviews. In our case study, we had a near 50% success rate of getting flagged reviews removed by Yelp. With this approach, you can quickly turn around the star ratings of some of your less-reviewed locations.

Use Your CRM System

Before you turn to your Customer Relationship Management software to request reviews, be sure to check your target review site’s policies. For example, sites like Yelp prohibit business owners from explicitly requesting reviews. 

But you can turn to your most loyal customers for reviews on most platforms. We have found the most success requesting reviews from highly-engaged customers, such as those belonging to a loyalty program. You could also consider segmenting your customers by frequency of visits, date of their most recent business interaction, or location to encourage them to leave a new review online. 

Don’t be afraid to A/B test different review request strategies. Maybe customers in California respond better to review requests via text message, or new customers respond best to requests at the point of sale. 

Identify Important Review Themes

When it comes to Online Reputation Management, it can be easy to treat the symptoms of customer unhappiness, but not take care of the root cause of the issue. Online reviews are a symptom, but you can analyze the context of these reviews to reveal underlying problems that must be addressed. 

We like to try and identify “swing” topics – certain topics that tend to pop up in negative and positive reviews most frequently. For a restaurant franchise, it may be a certain dish. For a home services business, it might be punctuality (positive reviews about a service person being on time, negative reviews about tardiness). Identifying these topics with some basic text analysis tools, or even pulling a sample of reviews manually, can help your business solve problems that apply across locations. 

Sometimes the solution to one or two key issues in your business can help stop the influx of new negative reviews. 

Standardize a Review Response Strategy

First and foremost: do not use a strict template for responding to reviews. This can be especially challenging to avoid if you are overseeing multiple locations and hundreds of reviews each year, but it’s worth the extra effort. What we recommend is that you use loose “scripts” for responding to common complaints or (hopefully) positive compliments. Working off a script ensures that all responses are consistent across locations.

There are a few important things to consider when responding to negative reviews, which you can read more about in our write-up on review responses. Identify a point-person or team who can serve as the brand “voice” and work off a strategy that includes responding quickly, empathizing with the customer, and pointing them toward a resolution. 

The goal is to offer more than a canned response that could come across as robotic and insincere. Leave room in your response for some personalization – it just might result in the reviewer updating or removing their review. 

Be sure to check out our latest ORM case study to see what impact these strategies have on star ratings of franchises or multiple location businesses. Should you have any questions about how Go Fish Digital can improve your online reputation management, you can contact us here.

How to Improve Reviews for Multiple-Location Businesses is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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Why Does Yelp Hide Reviews? Unpacking the Yelp Filter https://gofishdigital.com/blog/why-does-yelp-hide-reviews-filter/ https://gofishdigital.com/blog/why-does-yelp-hide-reviews-filter/#respond Thu, 20 Feb 2020 15:05:12 +0000 https://gofishdigital.com/why-does-yelp-hide-reviews-filter/ The Yelp filter, also known as the “Not Recommended” section of reviews on a page, has been a frustration of business owners and reviewers for years. Maybe you’ve experienced it yourself –– watching a review seemingly disappear only to find it buried at the bottom of the page where it does not contribute to the […]

Why Does Yelp Hide Reviews? Unpacking the Yelp Filter is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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The Yelp filter, also known as the “Not Recommended” section of reviews on a page, has been a frustration of business owners and reviewers for years. Maybe you’ve experienced it yourself –– watching a review seemingly disappear only to find it buried at the bottom of the page where it does not contribute to the average star rating. 

The algorithm Yelp uses to filter reviews is a closely-held secret, but Yelp has offered some hints in this video on the subject. Yelp says their algorithm mainly looks at review quality, reliability, and user activity when determining filter status. Yelp also states they want “active members” to have their reviews featured, rather than “reviews written by users we don’t know much about.”

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Here at Go Fish Digital, we’ve monitored thousands of Yelp reviews on behalf of our clients and tracked the correlation between filter status and certain qualities of a Yelp review or reviewer profile. Correlation is not causation, but when combined with Yelp’s own statements on the filter, we can put together some hypotheses. 

Here is what may cause your Yelp review to disappear or fall into the “Not Recommended” filter:

  1. Your Yelp profile is brand new
  2. You submitted your review at the same time as others
  3. Your Yelp profile is not verifiable 
  4. You don’t have a realistic review distribution
  5. You violated a Yelp guideline

1. Your Yelp Profile is Brand New

The characteristics we see correlate most strongly with filter status are the number of friends and number of reviews on a given Yelp user profile. In Yelp’s own video on filtering reviews, they compare an established profile to one that has no profile picture, zero friends, and just one review. In our research, adding just one friend on the platform increases the odds that your review pops back out of the filter.

It’s a frustrating double-standard by Yelp. Users are required to build up their Yelp presence before their reviews start to count. But if you are a business on Yelp, the first review you receive is marked “First to Review” and it very rarely gets filtered out. 

2. You Submitted Your Review at the Same Time as Others

It’s not just the characteristics of your profile that determine filter status, but also the timing of your reviews. Think about the algorithm that Yelp has devised. It’s designed to filter out untrustworthy reviews. Wouldn’t a sharp spike in the rate of new reviews cause some alarms to go off at Yelp?

The evidence seems to support this theory, even if the correlation is not as strong as it is with other profile characteristics. We’ve seen plenty of businesses who, in an effort to turnaround their Yelp scores, host an event or place more Yelp-approved calls to action (like signs, stickers, etc.) around the business. Even if these reviewers are legitimate, we see Yelp filter out a large percentage of them. Conversely, we’ve also seen businesses helped by the filter when they’re victimized by negative or spammy reviews that come in a wave. In those cases, the filter is a useful tool for business owners.

3. Your Yelp Profile is Not Verifiable 

Even if your account has a track record of reviews and friends, there are still some characteristics that could put a new review into the filter. Remember, Yelp is looking for “reliability” as one of its criteria. 

So how can Yelp confirm you’re a real user, and not a bot or an alias account? There are a few things you can do. 

  • Have a profile picture – in Yelp’s own example, you’ll notice that the filtered review does not have a profile picture. 
  • “Check-in” at the business you review – this verifies your location. Yelp likely prefers reviews and reviewers with a demonstrable track record of consistently reviewing businesses in their city.
  • Use the Yelp app – this goes hand-in-hand with checking in. Geo-tracking increases the odds of your review sticking.
  • Sync your Facebook account to your Yelp profileConnect Yelp and Facebook to further verify your identity. 
  • Include a photo with your review – Yelp likes to feature photos, and including one with your review can help it stay on the page. 

4. You Don’t Have a Realistic Review Distribution

This one is tough to define, but fits our hypothesis around reliability and trust signals that Yelp would take into consideration. Yelp wants to highlight the reviews of active users, which leads us to believe that a super-engaged reviewer would eventually develop a som

ewhat natural distribution of positive and negative reviews. Five-star reviews and one-star reviews are the most popular ratings published to Yelp by far, so perhaps something resembling an upside-down bell curve helps your chances.

Yelp Review Distribution

If your profile is full of either all four and five-star reviews, or all one and two-star reviews, don’t be surprised to see your reviews fall into the filter at a higher-than-normal rate. 

5. You Violated a Yelp Guideline

Yelp’s policies are pretty strict about businesses requesting reviews from customers. While tactics like putting a Yelp sticker on the cash register are ok, explicitly asking for reviews is not permitted. So if Yelp sees a bunch of new page visitors originating from the same source, they’re likely to start filtering them out. 

Let’s also include other explicit Yelp rule breaking here. For example, if you have accessed your personal Yelp profile from the same IP address as one that has accessed a Yelp for Business account, best believe Yelp will filter out a review you leave for that business. 

What Does NOT Affect Yelp Filter Status

We’ve covered what characteristics likely impact whether or not a review gets filtered. But there are other review traits that Yelp business owners have long suspected are also part of the algorithm. There are many theories out there, and Yelp is unlikely to confirm or deny anything. However, these are the characteristics we see having little to no correlation with filter status.

Star Rating

As far as we can tell, a 5-star review has just as much of a chance of being filtered as a 1-star review. This leads to more business owner frustration. Seeing a bunch of 5-star reviews not contributing to the business star rating can be infuriating. But you have to remember that Yelp may be keeping out some negative reviews as well.

Length of the review

We don’t see a correlation here either. Long reviews and short reviews get filtered at the same rates. 

Language/Word Choice

“Colorful language and imagery is fine” according to Yelp’s review guidelines. Word choice will not impact filter status, but don’t push your luck. Personal insults, advertising another business, or revealing intellectual property are all grounds for a review to be removed. 

Conclusion

Keep these tips in mind and you’ll hopefully start to see your reviews featured on a business page more frequently. If you’re a business owner, take a look at your page’s own filtered reviews and see if you spot the same similarities. 

Should you have any other questions about Yelp, whether it be removing negative reviews, monitoring locations, or responding to reviews, get in touch with Go Fish Digital. We’d love to help you out!

Why Does Yelp Hide Reviews? Unpacking the Yelp Filter is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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How To Respond To Online Customer Reviews https://gofishdigital.com/blog/when-to-respond-to-online-reviews-and-how/ https://gofishdigital.com/blog/when-to-respond-to-online-reviews-and-how/#respond Thu, 08 Aug 2019 14:00:59 +0000 https://gofishdigital.com/when-to-respond-to-online-reviews-and-how/ If you’ve found your way over to this post, you probably already know the importance of online reviews. A business’ star rating on major review sites, like Yelp and Google, has very real consequences on its bottom line. So making review management a priority is essential to maintaining a brand’s online reputation. Here at Go […]

How To Respond To Online Customer Reviews is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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If you’ve found your way over to this post, you probably already know the importance of online reviews. A business’ star rating on major review sites, like Yelp and Google, has very real consequences on its bottom line. So making review management a priority is essential to maintaining a brand’s online reputation. Here at Go Fish Digital, we work with dozens of clients across different industries to optimize their online reviews. One of the questions we receive most often from our clients is, “When should I respond to reviews?”

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Replying to a nasty review can often feel like a futile exercise. But your response to a review is not just for that one past customer. Your response also influences the opinion of all the prospective customers who are researching your company to help guide their purchasing decision. Readers want to see that a company cares enough to own up to their mistakes and take the good feedback with the bad. Studies also show that businesses replying to reviews generally see an uptick in their overall rating. 

But, not all reviews require a response. We’re here to help you determine when to post a reply and when not to based on our experience resolving customer complaints and encouraging a review rating change.

How To Respond To Online Customer Reviews

Reviews That Need a Response

Positive Reviews – That’s right, even positive reviews should warrant a response. This one is easy – thank the reviewer (by name if possible) for taking the time to leave a review. Personalize your reply even further by commenting on something specific that the reviewer really liked. 

Neutral Reviews – Most reviewers feel compelled to leave a review after an extremely noteworthy customer event, either good or bad. So, even though they’re rare, neutral reviews require a response. If the review mentions both something positive and a minor complaint, make sure you note your appreciation for their feedback and work to address the complaint.

Negative Reviews (Most of the time)

Every business receives at least some negative feedback. While it can be tough to not get emotional, keeping your cool is essential when it comes to crafting your response. Unless the customer requires an immediate response (such as a shipment being late), we recommend responding 24-48 hours after the review is posted. This waiting period will help you overcome your initial knee-jerk reaction, and it will give you time to pull any details needed to address specifics from the reviews. 

We recommend the following 5-step process to all of our clients when they are going to respond to a negative review. 

  1.     Address the reviewer personally, by name or username.
  2.     Thank the reviewer for leaving their feedback.
  3.     Empathize and apologize for the specific issue(s) called out in the review.
  4.     Restate that this issue conflicts with your business’ best practices and apologize.
  5.     Take the conversation offline by including a contact name, email address, and phone number.

 

Reviews That DO NOT Need a Response

If there is something for you or your business to act on in a negative review, it’s best to assure the reviewer and your potential customers that the issue is being addressed. However, not all negative reviews are so cut and dry. Sometimes, the best response is no response.

Flaggable Reviews

Reviews that are profane, impersonal, displaying a conflict of interest, or just a case of an unhappy individual having a venting moment, your business does not need to waste time developing a reply. Sometimes, no amount of apologizing or taking ownership will resolve the issue, and it’s best to make that judgment on a case-by-case basis.  In some instances, you can appeal to the review site’s Review Guidelines to see if the review is in violation of any rules that would warrant removal.

Filtered Reviews

Many review sites have a moderation period in between when a review is submitted and when the review is published. For example, Glassdoor checks for language violations or attempts at review gaming before approving reviews. Yelp, which is a thorn in the sides of many small businesses, throws what they believe to be illegitimate or untrustworthy reviews into a Not Recommended filter, hidden from the public page.

If a negative review falls into Yelp’s Not Recommended category (usually within a few days of being submitted), we do not recommend responding. A back and forth conversation with the reviewer might signal to Yelp that the review is more legitimate than the reviewer’s profile would indicate and pull the review out of the filter.

If the review is positive, however, we do recommend responding, and marking the review as Useful, Funny, or Cool to get it out of the Not Recommended category. Sometimes those small steps can be enough to get that review back on the page!

Conclusion

Having a well-developed review response strategy has become an essential part of managing any type of business. As you come across different types of reviews, work with your communications or social media teams to find out where the line is between those reviews that require a response and those that do not. Then, develop a rough script (with room for customization and personalization) that a designated point of contact can use on new reviews. Don’t feel compelled to respond to a negative review right away unless the review dictates it and remember the above tips in your reply.

Following these recommendations, you can develop a consistent voice that will lead to an improved brand reputation, and maybe even help convert some reviews from negative to positive. 

How To Respond To Online Customer Reviews is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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PR vs. ORM: What They Teach One Another https://gofishdigital.com/blog/pr-vs-orm-what-they-teach-one-another/ https://gofishdigital.com/blog/pr-vs-orm-what-they-teach-one-another/#respond Thu, 07 Mar 2019 17:40:17 +0000 https://gofishdigital.com/pr-vs-orm-what-they-teach-one-another/ A generation ago, brand management was a lot more straightforward. Looking to get the word out on your product or service? Hire a slick advertising agency or a well-connected public relations firm and you’re off to the races. But the digital age has demanded more from marketers. With an increasingly skeptical and digitally-savvy culture, consumers […]

PR vs. ORM: What They Teach One Another is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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A generation ago, brand management was a lot more straightforward. Looking to get the word out on your product or service? Hire a slick advertising agency or a well-connected public relations firm and you’re off to the races. But the digital age has demanded more from marketers. With an increasingly skeptical and digitally-savvy culture, consumers have turned to review sites, social channels, and good old-fashioned online search to help steer their purchasing decisions. As we like to say around here, word of mouth is digital.

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I started my career in a fairly traditional PR agency (think writing press releases and pitching media – that sort of thing) before transitioning into the growing field of online reputation management, and that has given me a lot of perspective on both industries. While they differ greatly in how they go about putting a client’s best foot forward, I have learned one thing – both disciplines can fit together to accomplish their goals. In fact, our online reputation management agency partners with a number of PR agencies and publicists to help fill in the gaps that traditional media relations or crisis communications strategies might miss.

It has proved to be a mutually beneficial arrangement. Having worked on both sides of the aisle, here’s what I’ve recognized as the items one industry can learn from the other.

Crisis Management is a Short-Term Solution

There is absolutely value in hiring an experienced publicist or PR agency to control messaging during or shortly after a brand crisis. Alternatively, ORM is most often brought in to help clean up the residual search result damage that may remain several weeks or months after public outrage has died down. Even if a crisis is navigated perfectly, negative publicity or review sites spammed with hearsay and rumors might still outrank a brand’s own content. When pitching stories to media might not be enough, bringing on an ORM team for search results or online reviews improvement might be the way to go.

The Press Release is Not Dead

I’ll admit – I was guilty of calling for the demise of the press release even when I was working in PR. Most will agree that the era of blasting a media list with a generic press alert and hoping for the best is behind us. But there is still value in the press release from an ORM perspective. Distribution platforms like PR Newswire have high Domain Authority, and a well-optimized press release can often rank high enough to suppress more negative content in Google’s search results. Depending on the service you’re using, various outlets that run press releases verbatim can also fill the search results with a few more positive URLs.

Owned Content is Still Important

Don’t overlook the value of owning and staying active on content platforms you can already control. This includes social media, a personal website, profiles on sites like Crunchbase, About.me, and Medium, as well as other free listing services across the web. A strong presence here can help demote a negative page that ranks, or fortify your search results for proactive online reputation management. This is especially true for individuals who have unfairly negative URLs ranking – those unfortunate enough to share a name with a criminal, the subjects of negative stories that went on to be retracted, etc. Back in the PR world, the automatic reflex might be to pitch an interview or issue a statement, and that can certainly help from an ORM perspective as well.

Leverage PR for Link Building

When it comes to working with authoritative online media to place links, it helps to have a digital PR agency that can leverage existing relationships. Receiving quality links from reputable sites is still a great way to nudge positive content above less favorable URLs. We’ve learned from working hand-in-hand with our PR partners that when we’re aligned on what the positive URL targets are for promotion, the digital PR team can work to get that quality link built into a piece of positive publicity if the opportunity is there.

Commit to an Online Review Improvement Strategy

There are many forms of marketing that look to control brand perception, but online review sites are where you’ll find true consumer sentiment. Companies can often feel powerless when it comes to fighting negative reviews, and dealing with them has become a bit of a blind spot of traditional PR and advertising agencies. Many times, we see a correlation between a negative search result issue and reviews on either consumer or employee review sites. A good ORM partner can craft strategies for requesting, deleting, and responding to online reviews. Your online presence isn’t scrubbed fully clean until these reviews and ratings are addressed.

 

Public relations and online reputation management don’t have to be an either-or decision for marketers to make. Depending on the situation and goals, either specialty can be effective. A good agency partner can utilize the inherent advantages of each discipline to repair and maintain a positive public-facing image, online, or in the media.

Have a question about PR vs. ORM? Leave a comment below!

PR vs. ORM: What They Teach One Another is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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How To Improve Online Reviews For Gyms https://gofishdigital.com/blog/three-unique-yelp-challenges-gyms-face/ https://gofishdigital.com/blog/three-unique-yelp-challenges-gyms-face/#respond Wed, 12 Sep 2018 15:08:09 +0000 https://gofishdigital.com/three-unique-yelp-challenges-gyms-face/ At Go Fish Digital, we see a lot of multi-location businesses that need help making review improvements. Goals range from increasing the overall number of positive reviews to hitting a star rating benchmark across all locations, to even scraping review text for trends and customer pain points. Recently, we wanted to study a type of […]

How To Improve Online Reviews For Gyms is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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At Go Fish Digital, we see a lot of multi-location businesses that need help making review improvements. Goals range from increasing the overall number of positive reviews to hitting a star rating benchmark across all locations, to even scraping review text for trends and customer pain points.

Recently, we wanted to study a type of business that could stand to revamp its review strategy – gyms. Yelp reports that 10% of all its reviewed businesses fit into the Beauty and Fitness category, 4th most of all industries. Gyms and health clubs depend on reviews to help potential customers make what is sometimes a big financial decision. Digging into the numbers, we found three unique characteristics that gym owners need to acknowledge and leverage to separate themselves in such a competitive space.  

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For this exercise, we selected five well-known gym franchises and pulled Yelp data from some of their locations across the country. In total, we studied the data from 111 Yelp pages. Here’s what we found.

Review Removal Opportunities

Something that sets Go Fish Digital apart is our knowledge of Yelp’s review guidelines and how we use that expertise to help our clients flag and remove negative reviews. On average, these gyms had 76 reviews contributing to their overall star rating. Using our Yelp Calculator, we found that many of the locations were close to a tipping point, or spot where their score could be bumped up to the next-highest star rating (Yelp rounds up scores in half-star increments).

We found 13 locations that would move up a half-star rating if just one 1-star review was removed. In total, 37 locations, or 33% of the gyms we studied, could be improved with three or fewer 1-star reviews removed.

According to Yelp’s publicly available data, 7% of all reviews have been removed for violating Yelp’s guidelines. With the number of gym reviews that do not offer a relevant or firsthand experience, we believe this is an untapped improvement opportunity. For franchises looking to improve their highly-visible star ratings, that is low-hanging fruit to start addressing.

Summer Slump?

At the top of each Yelp page, viewers have the option to see a backlog of the business’ overall scores over time. By pulling this information and stringing it together, we can get an average trendline for these gyms.

We expected to see some type of fluctuation around New Year’s each season. It makes sense, right? New Year’s resolution season can make or break a gyms’ year, so they focus a lot of resources on promotional efforts to bring in new members and keep them the rest of the year.

But that’s not what we saw when we charted out the data. What this graph does show is three very distinct dips in the average, each drop occurring during the summer months and rebounding in the fall. Could it be that a larger number of members are flocking to the gym for bathing suit season? Is there a delay in attendance following New Year’s sign ups? Whatever the case, it looks like the late spring/early summer needs to be a point of focus for gyms’ customer service and review response teams.

Inverse Review Distribution

In our experience, the vast majority of businesses with multiple locations have an overall review distribution in the shape of an upside-down bell curve: lots of reviews with one and five stars, some fours, and very few twos and threes. Yelp data backs this up. If a customer is feeling motivated to leave a review, they’re likely passionate one way or the other.

However, the sample of gym reviews we pulled show a different distribution. Look at the amount of 1 and 5-stars in our sample’s review distribution vs. Yelp’s site-wide distribution. The percentage of 1-star reviews is double the normal distribution, while the number of 5-stars is half the typical amount.

Even in a small sample, that’s a glaring disparity. The average rating for our sample of gyms was about 2.4 stars, so it’s no surprise to see that many negative reviews. Looking at the content of some reviews, issues like overcrowding, cleanliness and customer service are definitely factors that seem to swing reviewer sentiment to one extreme or another. But the presence of that many 1-star reviews presents an opportunity. Perhaps more than most industries, gyms need to have a plan in place for responding to new reviews, flagging and soliciting new reviews.

Improvement Strategies

Gyms don’t have to go outside Yelp’s policies to make improvements to their online reviews. While there are unique industry challenges, franchise gyms have a great setup for improving their reviews. There is both regional and national oversight to identify review trends, the managerial staff at each location to respond promptly to reviews, and ample member data at their disposal. With the proper monitoring and strategies in place, gyms can make sizeable competitive gains in the online review space.

 

How To Improve Online Reviews For Gyms is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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How to Improve Your TripAdvisor Rating: 6 Do’s and Don’ts https://gofishdigital.com/blog/improve-tripadvisor-rating/ https://gofishdigital.com/blog/improve-tripadvisor-rating/#respond Tue, 23 Jan 2018 19:10:27 +0000 https://gofishdigital.com/improve-tripadvisor-rating/ For business owners in the travel & hospitality industries, TripAdvisor has become much more than an online guide to area attractions. Now the “largest travel site in the world,” TripAdvisor dominates search results and user ratings for over 7.3 million hotels, restaurants, and activities around the world. If you’ve done any traveling lately, especially internationally, […]

How to Improve Your TripAdvisor Rating: 6 Do’s and Don’ts is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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For business owners in the travel & hospitality industries, TripAdvisor has become much more than an online guide to area attractions. Now the “largest travel site in the world,” TripAdvisor dominates search results and user ratings for over 7.3 million hotels, restaurants, and activities around the world.

If you’ve done any traveling lately, especially internationally, you’ve probably noticed how much influence the site’s collection of rankings and reviews has on area business. A favorable reputation on TripAdvisor has serious financial benefits and creates a highly competitive battle for eyeballs and notoriety within cities. In order to ensure your TripAdvisor page is best optimized for the millions of monthly users who might click through, here are a few helpful do’s and don’ts.

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Do: Familiarize Yourself with TripAdvisor’s Review Guidelines

Like most review sites, TripAdvisor has a list of content guidelines that all reviews must meet. Now, you can probably guess that standard rules around language and relevance have made their way into these guidelines, but did you know that reviews must also be recent and “easy to read”? Here is the full list of stipulations that all reviews must pass:

  • Family-Friendly
  • Relevant to Travelers
  • Unbiased
  • Helpful, First-Hand
  • Recent
  • Original
  • Non-Commercial
  • Respectful of Private Information
  • Listed by TripAdvisor
  • Easy to Read

If you can familiarize yourself with these guidelines, TripAdvisor does give its users the right to flag reviews that violate these basic principles. All you need to do is click the small gray flag in the bottom right corner of the review, select the infraction and leave a brief comment.

Although the site does run reviews through a 48-hour moderation process, we’ve seen plenty of spam and other unworthy content get posted. Flagging these negative reviews for removal can start to help increase your average rating.

Don’t: Try to Generate Fake Reviews

Given the potential recognition and competitive advantage of ranking at the top of TripAdvisor’s lists, it might be tempting to try to pursue less-than-credible review generation tactics. Don’t do it!

via GIPHY

TripAdvisor’s zero tolerance fraud policy applies to “any attempt to mislead, influence or impersonate a traveler” and can result in serious damage to your reputation. In addition to obvious offenses like enlisting others to write fake reviews, or preventing real customers from leaving negative reviews, there are other nefarious strategies that TripAdvisor will punish. These may include: asking friends or relatives to write positive reviews, copying comment cards and submitting that feedback as a review, or submitting a review on behalf of a customer.  

Potential penalties for businesses suspected of fraud range from significant drops in the Popularity Index, to a large red penalty notice being placed on your page. Best to avoid those types of consequences and generate reviews within the rules (see below).

Do: Take Advantage of Review Express

Many business owners aren’t aware of this, but TripAdvisor offers a free review request platform called Review Express. Unlike Yelp’s inconsistent review solicitation rules, TripAdvisor openly encourages managers to contact past customers for new reviews. With Review Express, you can quickly and easily upload a customer database of up to 1,000 email addresses and blast out a customized message that guides readers to leave a review.

Get more feedback with Review Express from Trip Advisor

There are just two stipulations when using this tool.

1) All contacts must be real customers only. Don’t use Review Express to contact potential guests, and don’t use it to send out your daily e-newsletter of kitten GIFS (DM me separately please, I want in).

2) No biased selection of the email addresses you upload. This is well-intentioned. However, TripAdvisor will punish you if they find you guilty of picking and choosing only contacts likely to leave a positive review. A list of approved contact information collection methods can be found here.

Don’t: Offer Discounts or Incentives in Exchange for Positive Reviews

Generally speaking, as much as they do for fake reviews or “organized boosting,” TripAdvisor will penalize businesses that incentivize guests to leave a positive review. Some artificially-inflated businesses have been caught for tactics like entering guests into a prize drawing if they leave a review, or offering gift cards and upgrades in exchange for reviews.

Any action that disputes the validity of TripAdvisor’s reviews is going to come with a harsh penalty. That’s why they depend on community members, an internal team and dedicated software to spot anything in the review text that might tip them off.

When you use Review Express, don’t put anything in the email promising a gift or discount for anyone who posts a review. Play within the rules, and avoid the ire of TripAdvisor.

Do: Respond to Negative Reviews

From a potential customer’s perspective, the only thing worse than seeing a negative review is seeing a negative review with no attempt from the business to remedy the issue. A proper response strategy will not only show you care about guest feedback, it will occasionally lead to a reviewer editing their post to a more positive sentiment.

You should reply to all negative reviews – even those you’ve flagged for removal (if it does get removed, your response will also be deleted). We recommend a few key elements that every negative review response should have:

  • Thank the reviewer for their feedback
  • Acknowledge and address the issue
  • Restate that the guest experience is a top priority
  • Leave your contact information for possible follow up

TripAdvisor is unique in that it only allows one review response from a manager, and no response feature for the reviewer. So say everything you need to say, and include contact information in case you need to continue the conversation offline. And remember, manager responses fall under the same guidelines as reviews. Keep it professional, concise and sincere.

Don’t: Let Your Page Go Unattended

Keeping your page up-to-date can go a long way in influencing the opinion of your business. It’s often the first and last place your customer visits: a chance for you to make a great first impression, and end the relationship on a high note. Put your best foot forward by making sure you have the following:

  • Accurate business location, phone number and website listings
  • A pin on the TripAdvisor Map (In the Management Center, under “Profile,” select “Manage Listing,” then click “Location”)
  • 20 or more high-quality, recent photos

Do a thorough scan of your page to make sure you’re not missing any other information that might be pertinent for guests. For example, a PDF of your menu if you operate a restaurant. These additions, along with healthy activity on the review response front, will give potential guests a full understanding of what you offer.

Overall, an optimized page and strategies for removing negative reviews and sustainably generating new positive ones will send you on your way to improving your standing on TripAdvisor.

 

How to Improve Your TripAdvisor Rating: 6 Do’s and Don’ts is an original blog post first published on Go Fish Digital.

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