Would you, could you, should you... respond to an online review?
Customer reviews land at the top of search results. In most cases, it is advised to respond to negative and positive reviews. Start by setting objectives and creating a plan for responding to online reviews.
The most important objectives for responding to reviews online:
- Demonstrate that you're listening
- Understand their perspective
- Provide the opportunity to explain the situation
- Be accountable, provide solutions, and solve problems
- Attempt to change perceptions
- Win over new residents
- Reinforce the positive
When to Engage a Positive Reviewer:
Positive comments are those that thank your company for the value or their experience. Thank everyone on social networks that leave positive or thoughtful comments. Consider thanking positive reviewers occasionally on review sites.
Share positive reviews on your website, in testimonial blocks within your email marketing, on social networking sites, and within your printed materials (including signs).
When to Engage a Constructive Reviewer:
Constructive negative comments are those that criticize your brand, company or service but invite opportunities to solve the problem.
This is the MOST critical opportunity to apologize, without flaw or fault and provide a solution to the problem. Start with these questions when addressing critical issues:
1. When did the issue(s) begin?
2. How many times has the customer encountered the issue(s)?
3. Can you fix the issue(s)?
4. What can you do to improve or prevent the issue(s) in the future?
How to Engage a Negative or Disruptive Reviewer:
Negative and disruptive comments are non-constructive insults to a company, service or employees designed to distract or interrupt the conversation.
Is there any merit to the claim(s)? If not, provide facts and ask for corrections to the content. If so, offer to discuss the issue offline. NEVER be defensive or appear to be covering up the facts!
Should You Engage With Spam?
Spam is when someone posts links or content completely unrelated to the community or service. Take a screen capturre or save the HyperAlerts notification, delete the content from the social networking pages and, for repeated offenses, ban the user from publishing again.
Additional measures you can take to protect your online reputation:
- Own any and all negative URL's that include your company name
- Set appropriate privacy settings on each social networking profile
- Claim your Google Places pages
- Claim your Yelp account
- Consider industry-specific ratings and reviews accounts
- Train employees about reputation management and privacy