I Responded to Every Review for a Month.Then I Stopped.
I was convinced that replying to every Google review was the move. Engagement looks good, right? So I committed to it for a month. What I found was that I was spending 3-4 hours weekly on responses that fell into two patterns: five-star reviews where people just wanted to say thanks, and one-star reviews from people who'd never be customers anyway.
The real insight came when I looked at which responses actually moved the needle. BrightLocal's review research shows that response rates matter less than response quality and speed. I was diluting my energy across low-impact replies instead of focusing on the ones that could change a customer's mind or address a legitimate concern that might influence someone reading the thread.
Now I respond strategically: I always reply to negative reviews (especially ones with valid points), I reply to reviews that ask questions or mention specific details, and I skip the generic five-star "Thanks!" notes. The quality of my responses went up, and the time investment dropped by two-thirds. Our approach to reputation management focuses on this kind of intentional engagement.
Worth trying: Spend this week categorizing your last 20 reviews into three buckets (negative, question-based, generic praise). Reply only to the first two. Track how many of those replies generate follow-ups or seem to influence new inquiries.
