How to Get More Google Reviews (Without Being Awkward)

S
Sage
Reputation & Content Advisor · April 15, 2026

Why Google reviews matter more than ever

Google reviews are no longer just social proof — they are a direct ranking factor. According to BrightLocal's 2025 Local Consumer Survey, 87% of consumers read online reviews for local businesses, and 73% say they only pay attention to reviews written in the last month.

Here is what reviews actually do for your business:

The bottom line: reviews are not optional. They are your most powerful marketing asset, and most businesses barely scratch the surface.

The psychology of asking for reviews

Most business owners know they should ask for reviews. The problem is it feels awkward — like begging for a compliment. But here is the reality: the number one reason people do not leave reviews is that nobody asked them.

BrightLocal found that 65% of consumers have left a review when asked by a local business. Compare that to the roughly 5-10% who leave reviews on their own. Asking is not pushy — it is expected.

The psychological principles that make review requests work:

5 proven methods to ask

1. Ask in person (at the point of peak satisfaction)

The most effective method, period. When a patient walks out of a dental office smiling after a painless procedure, or a homeowner shakes the HVAC tech's hand after their AC is fixed on a 100-degree day — that is the moment. Say it simply: "We'd really appreciate a Google review if you have a minute. I can text you the link right now."

2. Send a text message with a direct link

Text messages have a 98% open rate compared to 20% for email. Send a short, personal text within 1-2 hours of the appointment:

Text template
"Hi [Name], thanks for coming in today! If you have 60 seconds, a Google review would mean a lot to us: [link]. Thank you! — [Business Name]"

Keep it under 160 characters if possible. Include their name, keep it warm, and make the link the focal point.

3. Send a follow-up email

Email works best as a backup — for customers who did not respond to the text, or for businesses where texting feels too informal (law firms, financial advisors). Subject lines that work: "How did we do?" and "Quick favor — 60 seconds" outperform anything generic.

4. Use QR codes in your physical space

Print a QR code that links directly to your Google review page and place it at checkout counters, on receipts, on table tents (restaurants), in waiting rooms, or on job completion paperwork. Auto shops and salons see strong results with QR codes on mirrors or at the register.

5. Add it to your existing customer touchpoints

Think about every place you already communicate with customers: appointment confirmation pages, email signatures, invoice footers, post-service survey pages, and "thank you" screens. Adding a review link to these existing touchpoints generates passive reviews with zero extra effort.

Pro Tip

AdIQ's review management system automates this entire process. After each appointment or service, an SMS and email review request is triggered automatically with your custom-branded direct link. Clients using AdIQ's review automation average 8-12 new Google reviews per month — compared to the industry average of 1-2.

Timing: when to ask (the golden window)

The best time to ask for a review depends on your business type, but the golden window is always the same: when the positive emotion is at its peak, but before the customer has moved on to their next task.

The one rule: never wait more than 24 hours. Review rates drop by roughly 80% after the first day. If you are sending review requests a week later, you have already lost most of them.

Word-for-word scripts that work

In-person script (at checkout)

Script
"We're really glad you had a great experience today. If you have a minute, a Google review helps us more than you'd think — it helps other people like you find us. I can text you the link right now if that's easier."

Text message (post-appointment)

Template
"Hi [Name]! Thanks for choosing [Business]. If you have 60 seconds, a Google review would really help us out: [link]. We appreciate you!"

Email subject + body

Subject line
"Quick favor — 60 seconds?"

Body
"Hi [Name], thank you for trusting [Business] with your [service]. We'd love to hear how it went. If you have a minute, a quick Google review helps other [customers/patients/clients] find us — and it means a lot to our team. [Button: Leave a Review]. Thank you, [Owner/Team Name]"

For repeat customers

Template
"Hi [Name], you've been with us for [X years] and we really value your loyalty. If you haven't had a chance yet, a Google review would mean the world to us. It only takes 60 seconds: [link]"

What NOT to do

Google has clear policies about reviews, and violating them can get your reviews removed or your profile penalized. Here is what to avoid:

How many reviews you actually need

The magic number depends on your market and industry, but here is a practical framework:

But here is the part most articles miss: recency matters as much as quantity. A business with 300 reviews but none in the last 3 months will be outranked by a business with 80 reviews that gets 3 new ones every week. Google rewards velocity — a consistent, ongoing stream of fresh reviews.

Aim for at least 2-3 new reviews per week. That is only 8-12 per month, which is completely achievable for any business seeing 50+ customers monthly. The math works out to roughly a 15-25% conversion rate on your review requests.

Key Takeaways

  • 87% of consumers read reviews for local businesses. Reviews directly impact Google Maps rankings.
  • 65% of people will leave a review when asked. The biggest barrier is simply not being asked.
  • Ask at the point of peak satisfaction — text within 1-2 hours for the highest conversion rate.
  • Use a direct Google review link in every request to minimize friction.
  • Never offer incentives, use review gating, or buy fake reviews — Google penalizes all three.
  • Aim for 2-3 new reviews per week. Consistency matters more than total count.
  • Respond to every review personally — it signals to Google and future customers that you care.

Ready to put this into action?

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