Before a potential customer calls you or sends a WhatsApp, they will almost certainly search for your business online and read your reviews. A business with 47 reviews averaging 4.8 stars will always win against a business with 3 reviews averaging 3.2 stars, even if the second business is objectively better.
Reviews are not just vanity metrics. They directly affect how many customers choose you, how you rank in Google local search, and how much you can charge. Here are five strategies that consistently work for South African small businesses.
1. Ask at the peak moment of satisfaction
The best time to ask for a review is immediately after you have completed the work and the customer has expressed satisfaction. This is the peak moment. Their experience is fresh, they are happy, and they are most likely to act on your request.
A simple, direct ask works best: “I am really glad we could help. Would you mind leaving us a quick Google review? It makes a huge difference for a small business like ours.” Most happy customers will say yes on the spot.
2. Make it as easy as possible
Most people want to leave a review but drop off when they cannot find where to leave it. Remove every obstacle:
- Create a short link directly to your Google Business Profile review page (search “leave a Google review for [your business name]” and copy the URL from the write a review button)
- Send this link via WhatsApp immediately after the job with a short message
- Include the link in your invoice email
- Add a QR code to your business card or invoice that goes directly to your review page
When leaving a review is a 30-second process on their phone, far more customers will complete it.
3. Follow up once, politely
Many customers intend to leave a review and simply forget. A single follow-up message sent two to three days after the job is entirely appropriate and effective. Keep it short and personal:
“Hi [name], I hope the [service] is going well. If you have a moment, we would really appreciate a review. Here is the direct link: [link]. Thank you.”
This follow-up, sent automatically through your customer management system, can double your review volume with no extra effort.
4. Respond to every review, positive and negative
Responding to reviews signals to potential customers that you are engaged, professional, and care about your clients. For positive reviews, thank the customer by name and mention something specific about the job. For negative reviews, respond calmly, acknowledge the concern, and explain what you have done to address it.
A business with 50 reviews and thoughtful responses to each one looks far more trustworthy than a business with 50 reviews and no responses. Google also rewards businesses that actively engage with their reviews with better local search rankings.
5. Create a post-appointment review request sequence
Rather than relying on yourself to remember to ask, build a system that does it automatically. The sequence should be:
- Immediately after job completion: Send a thank-you WhatsApp or email with the review link
- Three days later: Automated follow-up reminder if no review has been left
- Thirty days later: A check-in email asking if they are happy with the service and mentioning reviews
This three-touch sequence, running automatically in the background, compounds over time. A business that generates three to four new reviews per week will have over 150 reviews by the end of the year. At that volume, your Google local ranking and customer conversion rate improve measurably.
What to do with your reviews
Reviews do not just live on Google. Share your best reviews on WhatsApp status, your website, your social media profiles, and your business proposals. A screenshot of a genuine five-star review from a real SA customer is more persuasive than any marketing copy you can write. Use them.