How to Get More Google Reviews for Your Local Business
If you run a local business, Google reviews are the new word of mouth. They influence your local ranking, your click-through rate from Google Maps, and ultimately how many customers walk through your door or land on your website. The good news: getting more reviews is not about luck. It’s about having a simple, repeatable system.
In this practical guide, we’ll show you exactly how to get more Google reviews with 12 tactics you can implement this week, including copy-paste email and SMS scripts, the best timing to ask, and how to automate the whole process.

Why Google Reviews Matter More Than Ever in 2026
- Local ranking boost: Google’s local algorithm uses review quantity, quality, recency and keywords to rank your Business Profile.
- Higher conversion: businesses with 4.5+ stars and 100+ reviews convert significantly better than those with fewer.
- Free social proof: a fresh stream of 5-star reviews reassures hesitant buyers more than any ad.
- AI search visibility: with AI Overviews and Gemini summaries citing reviews, your reputation is now part of how AI describes your business.

Before You Start: Set the Foundation
1. Claim and optimize your Google Business Profile
You can’t collect reviews without a verified Google Business Profile. Make sure your name, address, phone, hours, categories and photos are 100% accurate. An optimized profile gets seen more, which means more potential reviewers.
2. Generate your unique Google review link
This is the single most important asset for your campaign.
- Sign in to your Google Business Profile.
- Go to Read Reviews > Get more reviews.
- Copy the short link.
- Shorten it with Bitly or a custom domain like yourbusiness.com/review.
Save this link everywhere: email signature, invoices, receipts, thank-you pages, business cards.
12 Proven Tactics to Get More Google Reviews
Tactic 1: Just Ask (In Person, At The Right Moment)
The biggest reason customers don’t leave reviews is simple: nobody asked them. Train your team to ask at the peak of customer happiness: right after a successful service, when the customer says “thank you”, or when they compliment your work.
Sample script: “I’m so glad you’re happy with the result. Would you mind sharing that in a quick Google review? It really helps small businesses like ours. I can text you the link right now.”
Tactic 2: Send a Review Request by Email
Email works best for B2B, e-commerce, and service businesses. Send it 1 to 3 days after service, never the same day.
Email script:
Subject: Quick favor, {{FirstName}}?
Hi {{FirstName}},
Thanks again for choosing {{BusinessName}} last week. It was a pleasure working with you.
If you have 30 seconds, would you mind leaving us a short Google review? Your feedback helps other local customers discover us and helps our team know what’s working.
Click here to leave a review: {{ReviewLink}}
Thank you so much,
{{YourName}}
Tactic 3: Send an SMS (Highest Conversion Rate)
SMS open rates are above 95% and review request texts convert 4 to 8 times better than email. Keep it short and personal.
SMS script 1 (services):
Hi {{FirstName}}, it’s {{YourName}} from {{Business}}. Loved working with you today! If you have 20 seconds, a Google review would mean the world: {{ReviewLink}}
SMS script 2 (retail/restaurant):
Thanks for visiting {{Business}}, {{FirstName}}! How did we do? Tap here to share a quick review: {{ReviewLink}}
Tactic 4: Use a QR Code at the Point of Sale
Print a QR code linking directly to your review page on:
- Receipts and invoices
- Table tents in restaurants
- Counter cards near checkout
- Service vehicles
- Final job completion packets (very effective for home services)
Pair the QR code with a clear message like “Scan to leave us a Google review – it takes 20 seconds!”
Tactic 5: Add a Review Link to Your Email Signature
Every team member’s signature should include a one-line link such as: Loved working with us? Leave a Google review here. This passive tactic alone can generate dozens of extra reviews per year.
Tactic 6: Create a Dedicated “Reviews” Landing Page
Build a page on your website (e.g. thecrazypixel.com/reviews) that:
- Thanks the customer
- Includes one big button to your Google review link
- Shows existing reviews as social proof
This page becomes the destination for all your QR codes and short links.
Tactic 7: Automate Review Requests
Manually asking every customer doesn’t scale. Automate it using tools like NiceJob, Birdeye, Podium, GatherUp, or even a simple Zapier + Twilio workflow that triggers when:
- An invoice is marked paid
- A booking is completed
- A delivery is confirmed
Automation typically multiplies your review volume by 3 to 5 times within the first 90 days.
Tactic 8: Time Your Request Perfectly
| Business Type | Best Timing to Ask | Channel |
|---|---|---|
| Restaurant / Café | Right after the bill is paid | QR code + SMS |
| Home services | Same day, 1 hour after job completion | SMS |
| Retail | 1 day after purchase | Email or SMS |
| Healthcare / Wellness | 2 to 3 days after appointment | SMS |
| B2B / Agency | After a milestone or positive feedback | Personal email |
Tactic 9: Reply to Every Single Review
Google explicitly recommends responding to reviews. It signals that your business is active and customer-focused. Replies should be:
- Positive and relevant
- Professional and polite
- Short and personal (mention the customer’s name and specific detail)
Bonus: replying to negative reviews calmly often turns them into neutral or even positive ones.
Tactic 10: Train Your Team and Track It
Make review collection a tracked KPI. Some ideas:
- Weekly review count posted in your team chat
- Small bonus or shout-out for the team member mentioned by name in reviews
- Monthly goal (e.g. +20 reviews per month)
Tactic 11: Leverage Existing Happy Customers
Look at your CRM and identify customers who:
- Have given you positive feedback in surveys
- Are repeat buyers
- Have referred someone
Send them a personalized request. Conversion rates on these lists often exceed 30%.
Tactic 12: Make Review Requests Part of Your Onboarding/Offboarding
Bake the request into your standard customer journey: welcome email, follow-up email, completion email. When asking is systematic, you stop relying on memory.

What NOT to Do (Stay Compliant With Google’s Policies)
- Don’t buy reviews. It violates Google’s policies and can get your profile suspended.
- Don’t offer incentives (discounts, gifts, contests) in exchange for reviews.
- Don’t “gate” reviews by filtering happy customers to Google and unhappy ones to a private form. Google considers this review gating and prohibits it.
- Don’t ask in bulk blasts with generic copy. Personalize.
- Don’t ask the same person twice in a short time frame.
How to Get 100 Google Reviews (Realistic Roadmap)
- Weeks 1 to 2: set up your review link, landing page, QR codes and email signatures.
- Weeks 3 to 4: send a one-time campaign to your existing happy customer list.
- Month 2: implement SMS automation after every transaction.
- Month 3 and beyond: monitor, reply to every review, refine your scripts based on conversion.
Most local businesses following this plan reach 100+ reviews within 4 to 6 months.

Sample 3-Touch Sequence That Converts
| Touch | Timing | Channel | Goal |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Day of service | In-person ask + QR code | Capture immediate enthusiasm |
| 2 | Day +1 | SMS with review link | Make it frictionless |
| 3 | Day +4 | Friendly email reminder | Catch the ones who forgot |
FAQ: How to Get More Google Reviews
How can I increase my Google reviews fast?
The fastest legitimate way is to send a personalized SMS with your direct review link to every recent happy customer, then automate the same flow for all future customers. Combine this with a QR code at point of sale.
Is it legal to buy Google reviews?
Buying reviews is against Google’s policies and can lead to review removal, profile suspension, and even legal issues in many countries. Always earn reviews from real customers.
How do I get 100 Google reviews?
Set up automated SMS and email requests, ask in person at the moment of customer satisfaction, and use QR codes everywhere. With 30 to 40 transactions per week and a 15% conversion rate, you can hit 100 reviews in roughly 4 months.
What is the best time to ask for a review?
Ask at the peak of customer happiness, typically right after the service is completed or 24 to 72 hours later depending on your industry.
Should I respond to negative reviews?
Yes, always. A calm, professional reply showing you care often softens the original reviewer and impresses future readers more than perfect 5-star streaks.
Can I incentivize customers with a discount for a review?
No. Offering anything of value in exchange for a review violates Google’s policies. You can, however, thank reviewers publicly in your replies.
Final Thoughts
Getting more Google reviews is not about tricks, it’s about building a system: ask consistently, ask at the right moment, make it ridiculously easy, and automate the follow-up. Implement even half of the 12 tactics above and you’ll see your review count, your local ranking, and your revenue grow together.
Need help setting up an automated review system or optimizing your Google Business Profile? The Crazy Pixel can build the entire flow for you. Get in touch and let’s turn your happy customers into your best marketing channel.