The businesses with 200 reviews did not get there by running a campaign once. They built a system: a small set of consistent habits that generate reviews as a natural byproduct of normal customer interactions. The businesses with 12 reviews over five years did not fail to ask. They asked inconsistently, got inconsistent results, and eventually stopped asking.
Review count is one of the eight scored categories in an F! Insights GBP audit, and it is consistently the category with the largest gap between local businesses and the competitors outranking them in the Map Pack.
In This Article
Why Volume Matters More Than You Think
Google’s local ranking algorithm uses review count as a prominence signal. A business with 200 reviews at 4.6 stars almost always outranks a business with 40 reviews at 4.9 stars in a competitive market. Volume matters more than perfection because volume is harder to fake and takes longer to accumulate.
To learn more about the client onboarding and retention workflow, visit What to Look for Before Hiring a Local SEO Agency. Respond to Every Google Review Without Sounding Robotic and Turn a Low Review Score Into a Local SEO Sales Conversation cover adjacent steps in detail.
The Velocity Problem
Total count is one input. Review velocity is the other. Google interprets recent reviews as a signal of current operational status. A business that received 200 reviews over five years but none in the last three months has a different velocity profile than one with 60 reviews all received in the past eighteen months. If your score in this category is low despite having a reasonable total, the velocity problem is usually the cause. For how this fits into the overall competitive picture, see What Your Google Business Profile Score Actually Means.
The System
- Identify the moment in your customer interaction when satisfaction is highest. For service businesses this is typically right after the job is complete.
- At that moment, ask directly. Not “if you get a chance” and not “whenever you feel like it.” A clear, low-friction ask: “If you had a good experience today, a Google review would really help us. I can send you the link right now.”
- Have the direct Google review link ready to send via text or email within one minute of the verbal ask.
- Send one follow-up if there is no review within 48 hours. One follow-up, not three.
Review Request Templates
SMS Template (under 160 characters)
“Hi [Name], thanks for choosing us for [service]. If you have a moment, a Google review would mean a lot: [link]”
Email Template
“Hi [Name], We appreciate you trusting us with [service performed]. If your experience was positive, a Google review helps other [city] residents find us when they need [service]. It only takes a minute: [link]. Thanks for your time.”
Follow-Up (48 hours later, if no review)
“Hi [Name], I sent a review link two days ago and wanted to make sure it came through. No pressure at all, but if you have a moment: [link]. Either way, thanks for choosing [Business Name].”
Do not offer incentives for reviews. This violates Google’s terms of service and can result in review removal or profile suspension.
The Response Practice
Responding to every review, positive and negative, is a ranking signal and a conversion signal. Google rewards consistent review response rate as evidence of active profile management. If you have unanswered reviews, respond to all of them today. Set a calendar reminder to respond to new reviews within 48 hours of receipt.
Tracking Your Progress
Set a monthly reminder to check three numbers: your total review count, when your most recent review was posted, and what the top competitor in your Map Pack currently has. The gap between your count and theirs is your target. For a structured view of how your review metrics compare to benchmarks in your category, see Local SEO Benchmarks: What Good Actually Looks Like.