Getting Google reviews without being annoying
Last reviewed 19 May 2026 | Growth Check editorial team
Asking for reviews well is a small system that pays back forever. Most businesses ask badly (or not at all) and miss the easiest growth lever they have.
The 3-step system
Step 1: Ask at the right moment
Right after the job is done and they're happy. Not 3 days later, not at the end of the month with the invoice. Same-day, while the positive feeling is fresh.
Step 2: Make it stupid easy
Send a text (not email, texts get 95% open rate) with your direct Google review short link. Keep the message under 30 words:
"Hi [name], thanks for choosing us today. Would mean a lot if you could leave a quick review: g.page/r/[your-id]. Cheers, [Your name]."
Step 3: Reply to every review
Within 48 hours. Reply with the customer's first name and reference something specific. This signals to other readers that you care, and also gives Google more text to associate with your business.
What NOT to do
- Don't offer discounts or incentives, against Google's policy, and removes credibility.
- Don't pay for reviews, Google catches them and the suspension is brutal.
- Don't ask in person while doing the job, feels pushy and converts worse than text.
- Don't batch-ask 50 customers in one week, looks suspicious to Google and risks suspension.
The result
Most trades go from 1-2 reviews/month to 8-15. Within 90 days you're ahead of every competitor who isn't doing this systematically.