How to Respond to Negative Online Business Reviews

Even if your organization is focusing on quality customer service, sooner or latter you are going to receive a “less than favorable” review on the web. What you do next is critical to your bottom line!

Online reviews aren’t really about “customer service.” They’re a part of the sales process. Consider this: A review’s purpose is to give potential new customers an idea of what to expect if they decide to do business with your company. Third-party party information and experiences can be very influential in the buyers decision making process. That’s exactly what a review is — third-party information. The likelihood that the negative reviewer will ever return to your business to spend money is low, so the purpose of any response is to mitigate the negative impact that review may have on potential new customers.

The first step is knowledge. You need to know when negative reviews are put up about your company. Don’t wait passively to discover the comment months or even years down the road. In the meantime, countless customers may be turned off and turned away by that review. Response time is key! You can easily monitor your brand name and website domain in real time using Google Alerts. Properly setup, Google will notify you in real time, any time your site or business name is used online. Read our article on Setting Up Google Alerts.

Now you need to determine if you can respond. Some sites like TripAdvisor and Yelp have a “Business Owner Response” gateway. Other sites like Google Maps do not provide a method to directly respond. The crew over at SEO Igloo has developed a list of site interaction options which you can find out about in their Respond to Reviews article.

Next you need to decide if intervention is necessary. Some reviews are too general or abstract to get involved in the response process. Non-specific comments should be ignored (in my opinion) for the most part. There may be a some nuggets of information that you can use as a business owner to improve your customers experience, for example if the same complaint keeps surfacing, but responding to generalizations is counterproductive.

If you find a specific complaint that is a good candidate for a response, remember to check your ego at the door. This is part of the sales process, so you need to think of that review as if it were any other sales objection or concern. Nothing has ever been sold by telling the potential prospect that they were “wrong or stupid,” even if that’s the truth. Instead you need to demonstrate that you care, and turn the review is a non-issue. Maybe even sprinkle some “sales pitch” into the response if you have a creative writer!

The “caring resolution” approach utilizes a time honored method to answering sales objections called the “Feel, Felt, Found” method. The twist is that I have added “Fixed” to the formula. Here is what the response structure looks like in practice:

FeelWe understand how you feel about this; product, service, treatment, quality, or price.

FeltIf any other customers have felt this way, please contact us directly and immediately.

FoundWe looked into your complaint and here is what we found out about our business.

FixedThanks for bringing this to our attention, this is how we Fixed it so that it never happens again.

Of course you will need to camouflage the words so your sales tactic is not obvious to the consumer. This approach has a strong psychological impact on potential clients as it completely dilutes the complaint. In addition, I have seen this method turn the original complainer into an advocate, getting them to update the review with a more positive slant. Always strive for a win-win solution.

On a final note, make sure to read the rules and terms of service for each particular review site. They all have unique engagement rules, and violating them could cause your response to not appear on the site. If you need help getting started, please contact us.

You Know the Yellow Pages Are Dead When…

I am moving; for joy, for joy. I hate moving but it seems I move regularly. I think this is trait passed on to me by my parents because they never lived anywhere for more than 10 years. I think it’s part of a gypsy heritage.

When I was young I can remember how the phone book was an invaluable tool. You would find notes scribbled on the covers and circles, arrows and margin notes on the inside pages. For most of my adult life, I lived in small town America. The phone book was important to be sure, albeit a tiny book with few pages. It fit in a drawer next to the phone on the wall and was quite light to pick up.

I moved to Southern California a few years ago. One of the first things that amazed me was the huge books I found plopped on my doorstep each year. A mammoth white pages and an even larger Yellow Pages. So, anyway, I found myself moving the other day and under the guest bed was where I had been throwing these books. I didnt even give it a moment of thought when moving time came. The new ones that just showed up along with my “collection” all went into the recycling bin.

After regaining my breath from the haul out, I reflected on the fact that I hadn’t opened any of them, ever! This fact was worth considering more, given I am am marketer, who at one time, made a living placing tiny Yellow Pages ads in target cities. Perhaps, more importantly, here I was new in town and had no need for The Phone Book!

In 2007, Search Engine Land did an exhaustive study that uncovered that searches for the yellow pages online were dropping while searches for Google maps were increasing. This would point towards a double challenge for Yellow Pages publishers. Not only is their print version soon to be a dinosaur. They waited so long to create online versions, they aren’t needed here either. Ouch!

But what does this all mean for businesses? While it is somewhat hard to find statistics that validate my prognostication. 15 years ago 100% of the population used The Yellow Pages. Today it is split even. 50% use the internet and 50% use the printed books. That’s a pretty steep decline in a relatively short period of time. If your business has always done well with the printed book, you probably need to stay in it. In fact I would recommend a smaller size in more categories. At the same time, you better be getting sharp at understanding the various ways someone might find you online as well as how social media will continue to reshape how people filter information in their lives.

It’s not a matter of if, but when the print book will make no sense any more at all. I am betting it will be sooner than later. I’m a bit biased though, because I have a fondness for trees and my expectations are such that there will be somewhat less strain on them when phone books do not exist at all, anywhere, anymore.

The Right Way to Handle Bad Online Reviews

The Right Way to Handle Bad Online Reviews
Google Local – Bad Business Reviews

No matter how dedicated you are to customer service, there will be a time that you end up dealing with a customer that just cannot be satisfied.  Often, these customers will take to the internet to even up the score and you are left with a bad review that may rank first in Google search results.

If you let that review sit there, it is only going to harm your company’s reputation.  No company is perfect, but when a consumer sees that bad review, they are not going to be thinking about your side.  You need to be proactive in handling this situation so that your business is not adversely affected.

The first thing that you need to do before addressing the search results is do what you can to make the situation right with your customer.  Document everything you do and keep a record of all communication.  Remember, it is vital to be professional and ingratiating!  If you cannot solve the issue, at the very least, you will have the proof at your disposal that you tried.

Now, let’s move on to fixing that review.  While many of us would love to be able to write Google and ask them to remove that nasty review, the chances of this happening are very slim.  They have a no intervention policy in place, and it will be up to you to handle the issue on your own.

The first step you need to take is to bury that bad review with good reviews.  This will move it further down in the ranking and provide potential customers with a more balanced view of your site.  This is the easiest step that you can take, and will have the best results.

Please keep in mind that for local results, Google frequently harvests data from several review sites such as Yelp.com, ApartmentRatings.com, TripAdvisor.com and many others.  It is vital to monitor the review sites that carry your listing to see what reviews have been posted.  You will need to address the bad reviews on each one to get the best results.

While Google does provide you with the ability to flag a review posted from an individual directly to Google, this should not be abused.  You can certainly flag a bad review that uses incendiary language, but it is not recommended to use this feature to make a bad review disappear.

For these on-site Google reviews, you have the option of handling bad reviews in a very positive way.  Google allows anyone to leave a review, so you can utilize this to your best advantage with a little creativity.

Now, let’s focus on a few more ways that you can ensure that bad reviews will not be posted for your company.

Go Above and Beyond – Treat every single customer you have as though they are your only customer.  Handle all communications with respect and make sure that you are doing everything in your power to keep them happy.  This benefits your company in more ways than one.

Ask Happy Customers for Feedback – If you have a customer that is beside themselves with glee over your service, you need to take advantage of that.  Ask them to write a brief testimonial and then place it in on a special testimonial page on your site.  You can link this page to your Google Maps page quite easily.  Look for the “Link to this Page” link that is found on the bottom right corner of your reviews page.  Add the link to your testimonial page and you’re done!

No one likes getting a bad review, but by following the steps listed above, you can minimize the damage it could cause.

Leverage Local Search

SEO Link Development-Leverage Local Search

We have received a number of calls and emails recently regarding results that appear in Google’s Local Search.  Google does not announce changes in it search methods, but it appears that Local Search has changed recently.  In the past, traditional “brick and mortar” type business saw the most benefit from optimizing Local Search.

Local Search Explained: Local Search was originally designed for consumers to find products, services and business in their own backyard.  The average consumer would type in “appliance repair” and Google would display local listings (based on your IP address) at the top of the page.  The data was mostly compiled from online Yellow-Page listings.  If you paid for the online listing in your phone directory, your business was automatically listed in Local Search.  As Google perfected Google Maps, these listings appeared next to a local map with a marker showing your location.

Recent Changes: I have noticed that searches that are obviously local are no longer automatically delivering Local Search results.  A Google search for “appliance repair” no longer automatically displays the Google Map with Local Search results.  Instead, you have to force Local Search by including a modifier like “appliance repair Denver” or “appliance repair 90210” I suspect that Google was losing zillions of advertising dollars by people clicking on Local Search instead of Paid Adwords placements and this is why they have changed the search model.

How to Leverage These Changes: List your business in Local Search following the guidelines and terms you and your SEO have developed.  Examples: Follow along here please – search “hotels” in Google, you get web results for all the big players in the travel market.  In the past, you used to get Local Search results listing “hotels” near your location.  Now search “breckenridge hotels” and you get a mixture of big travel players, well optimized websites.  Then search, “breckenridge colorado hotels” and Local Search pops its ugly head in the results at the top of the page.

Local Search and Your Business: If you are reading this, it is more likely that you rent condos or sell real estate.  The terms that trigger Local Search are most likely search terms you and your SEO are already working on.

What should you do?  Your business model can take advantage of this if you get creative.  The key is to tie your location to the most important search term for you business.  This can be difficult if your website is a pure online venture, but there are still ways to leverage Local Search.  There are provisions for businesses with multiple locations, so it may be worth it to add a mailing address in your target area if you are not actually located there – hint, hint.

Getting Started: Visit the Google hub for adding your business to Local Search – www.google.com/local/add

Account Creation Tips:

Business Name – make sure to include your business “type” in your name.  If your proper business name is “ABC Photography”, list it with your primary business target included in the name, “ABC Wedding Photography” for example.

Description – Get your key search term in the first sentence, make sure the text is original (not copy/paste) and use all 200 characters: Using a robust ad copy style description will deliver more conversion.

Categories – use as many as are applicable.

Photos – Add the maximum allowed, ten photos.  Name the photos with your business type, example denver-wedding.jpg, aspen-condo.jpg or baja-real-estate.jpg

Under Custom – If you look at the Custom page in the account creation process there is the ability to create custom categories.  This can be a rich source for adding more information for the search engines and consumers to consume.

Confirm – Make sure to use the phone confirmation method for faster results.

Coupons – There is the ability to add a coupon or discounts at the end of the account creation process, create one!  People use coupons and discounts so add “savings offers” in as many locations on the internet as you can find.  Websites like hotelcoupons.com and skicoupons.com get mammoth amounts of traffic.

Need Help with all of this?  Linking clients give Dave a call and he can walk you through the process.