- Apr 20, 2009
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Wow! This is the most complete posting on G+ Reviews I've ever seen and well worth the read for any dealer or vendor that wants to be up to date on the topic:
The Complete Guide to Google+Local Reviews - and Especially How to Get Them | LocalVisibilitySystem.com
Here are just a few of the highlights, but there is a ton of good info here:
The author offers a section titled "Best practices for asking for reviews" where these two gems are found:
This is a very astute observation and one I think any dealer considering an outsourced solution needs to carefully consider. If every potential reviewer is filtered based on what they are likely to say through a pre-screening process and only the most likely to be positive reviews are given a link to follow, you are leaving tracks that are certain to look unnatural to Google. How long can you expect for those reviews to remain on your G+ page?
Take the 5 minutes to read this post, it is time well spent.
The Complete Guide to Google+Local Reviews - and Especially How to Get Them | LocalVisibilitySystem.com
Here are just a few of the highlights, but there is a ton of good info here:
- Yes, customers must have Google+ accounts in order to write a review. Having a Gmail account isn’t enough (it needs to be “upgraded” to a Google+ account). That also means customers can’t leave anonymous reviews; they need to be under customers’ real names.
- A few of the factors that matter to the “review filter” seem to be: whether customers try to post reviews at an unnatural pace, how many reviews a given person has written previously, the wording of the review, and the user’s location (IP address). We don’t know exactly what factors Google’s review filters consider, or which matter the most. But you do need to know that Google has the facts on your business’s review-gathering activity and each customer’s review-posting behavior – and Google can take a lot into account when deciding which reviews to toss versus keep.
- Smartphone users need the Google+Local app, and they must navigate to your listing through the app. Even if they have the app, they won’t see the “Write a review” button on your Google+Local listing if they navigate to it through their mobile browsers or by scanning a QR code.
- “Review stations” are not OK.
The author offers a section titled "Best practices for asking for reviews" where these two gems are found:
- Do NOT delegate the requesting of the reviews to someone out-of-house. It’s fine if your employee or receptionist does it, but the best is for the head honcho to be the one to ask.
- When possible, try not to give customers the direct link to your Google+Local page. Google most likely knows the referring URL – the page your customers were on before they came to your business’s listing. It’s also likely that Google will start filtering some reviews if it looks as though nobody’s writing them spontaneously and as though you’re pressuring them.
This is a very astute observation and one I think any dealer considering an outsourced solution needs to carefully consider. If every potential reviewer is filtered based on what they are likely to say through a pre-screening process and only the most likely to be positive reviews are given a link to follow, you are leaving tracks that are certain to look unnatural to Google. How long can you expect for those reviews to remain on your G+ page?
Take the 5 minutes to read this post, it is time well spent.
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