I Obsessed Over Review Count.Rankings Came From Consistency.
I spent months chasing a magic number. Ten reviews, fifty reviews, a hundred reviews.
The assumption was simple: more reviews equals higher local rankings. But when I looked at what actually moved the needle for clients on the Space Coast, the pattern wasn't about volume at all.
What mattered was recency and velocity. A business with 12 reviews posted in the last 30 days ranked higher than one with 200 reviews from two years ago.
com/business) weight fresh signals heavily, and that includes review freshness. The algorithm treats a steady stream of recent reviews as a signal of active, trustworthy business operations.
I also noticed that review diversity mattered more than I expected. Three detailed, specific reviews beat fifteen one-star ratings with no text.
com) confirms this: review quality and recency outperform raw count in local visibility. The real win is building a system where reviews come in regularly, not hitting a number once and stopping.
Check how our approach to local visibility handles this.
Worth trying: Audit your review dates in Google Business Profile. Flag reviews older than 90 days and identify which ones are missing detailed text. Reach out to recent customers for reviews mentioning a specific project or result—those detailed reviews signal more authority than generic praise.
