I Asked for Reviews Everywhere.Almost Nobody Left One.
I was staring at my Google Business Profile thinking I'd done everything right. Emails to past clients, pop-ups on the website, signs in the office. Nothing. Then I realized I was asking at the wrong moment. People don't leave reviews when they're thinking about you—they leave them when they're thinking about the decision they just made.
The shift was timing. I started asking for reviews within 24 hours of a completed project, before the client moved on to the next thing. Not a generic email template, but a text message with a direct link to my review page. BrightLocal's review data shows that response rates spike when the ask comes right after the transaction, not weeks later. The friction matters too—I cut the path from text to review down to two clicks.
What I found is that reviews aren't a marketing tactic you bolt on after the work is done. They're part of the service experience itself. If you want to understand how this fits into your larger local visibility strategy, our Google Business Profile approach covers the full picture.
Worth trying: Pick your three best clients from the last month and send them a text (not email) with a direct link to your Google review page. Track how many actually leave a review in the next 48 hours. That baseline tells you whether your timing or your ask needs to shift.
