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Guides
G-25
June 2026
5 min read
By The Toolbag Crew
Marketing Guide

Getting more 5-star reviews, and handling the bad ones without losing your cool

Reviews are how people pick a contractor now. Here's how to get more of the good ones, and deal with a one-star without making it worse.

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In short
Ask every job, every time. And the bad-review reply is for the next customer, not the angry one.
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Why reviews decide who gets the call

Think about the last time you hired anyone. A roofer, a dentist, somebody to fix the dishwasher. You probably didn’t read their website. You looked at the stars, skimmed a couple of reviews, and made the call in about ten seconds. Your customers do the exact same thing to you.

A trade with forty reviews at 4.8 stars beats a trade with six reviews at a perfect 5.0, nearly every time. Volume and recency matter as much as the score itself. A stack of reviews from three years ago tells people you were good once. A steady drip of fresh ones tells them you’re busy now and people keep walking away happy. That’s the signal that gets you the call.

It feeds Google too. Reviews are one of the strongest local ranking signals there is, so the shop with more recent reviews shows up higher in the map pack, which earns it more reviews, which ranks it higher still. The flywheel is real, and it’s worth getting on it early. Same logic that drives your local SEO on your website carries straight through your review profile.

How to actually get more of them

Most trades don’t have a review problem. They have an asking problem. Do great work and never ask, and you’ll get a review once in a blue moon, usually from someone who was either thrilled or furious. The happy middle, which is most of your customers, never thinks to do it.

So ask. Every job, every time. How and when you ask is the whole thing:

  • Ask at the right moment. Right after you've finished, while the customer is standing there looking at the clean install or the dry basement, that's when they love you most. A week later the feeling has faded.
  • Make it one tap. Don't tell someone to "look us up on Google." Send a text with a link straight to the review box. Every extra step loses people.
  • Ask the person, not the void. "Would you mind leaving a quick review? It really helps a small shop like ours." A real ask from a real person works. A blast of automated email mostly doesn't.
  • Never buy them or bribe them. Offering a discount for a review breaks Google's rules and can get your whole profile pulled. People can smell a bought review anyway.

You don’t need a hundred. Ten honest reviews a month, every month, will bury a competitor sitting on a stale pile from 2022.

When the bad one lands

It’s coming. Doesn’t matter how good you are. Sooner or later you get a one-star, and half the time it’s unfair: the wrong company, or a customer mad about something that was never in your hands. Your gut says fire back. Don’t.

Here’s the part nobody mentions. That response isn’t for the angry customer. It’s for the next twenty people reading it while they decide whether to call you. They don’t expect you to be perfect. What they’re watching is how you handle it when something goes sideways.

How to respond to a one-star
Cool off first

Never type a reply while your blood is up. Walk away, come back in an hour.

Stay calm and professional

"I'm sorry to hear this, that's not the experience we want. Can you call the office so we can make it right?"

Take it offline

Don't litigate it in public. Signal you're reasonable and move the actual fight to a phone call.

Don't argue facts in public

Even when you're dead right. The audience can't referee a he-said-she-said, and the contractor swinging back always looks worse.

If a review breaks Google’s rules, it’s spam, it’s from a competitor, it names the wrong business, you can flag it for removal. It’s slow and it doesn’t always work, but it costs you nothing to file, so file it.

Catch the complaint before it becomes a review

The best way to handle a bad review is the call that stops it from ever being posted. An unhappy customer almost always tells you before they tell the internet. They mention it on the job, or they go quiet, or the check shows up late. If you’ve got a habit of following up after every job, even a quick “how’d everything go?” text, you catch the grumble while it’s still fixable.

Fix it then, and a lot of those folks turn around and leave you five stars anyway. What they remember isn’t that something went wrong. It’s that you showed up and made it right.

The bad-review reply isn't for the angry customer. It's for the next twenty people deciding whether to call you.

Where ToolbagCRM fits

The whole thing falls apart on follow-through. You mean to ask for the review, the next job runs long, and you forget. ToolbagCRM sends the review request for you the moment a job is marked done, with a direct link straight to your Google profile. The follow-up text goes out on its own, so the grumbles land in your inbox instead of on Google. And it’s one flat price for the whole crew, so the office handling reviews never costs you an extra seat. Founders pricing is $99/mo for your first three months, then $150/mo locked for the life of the account.

Frequently asked questions

How do I get more Google reviews for my business?

Ask every customer right after you finish the job, when they're happiest, and send a text with a direct link to your review page. Making it one tap instead of telling them to search for you is what actually moves the number.

Should I respond to negative reviews?

Yes, always. The reply is really for the future customers reading it, not the angry one, so stay calm, apologize, and offer to take it offline with a phone number.

Can I get a fake or unfair Google review removed?

You can flag reviews that break Google's policies (spam, wrong business, or a conflict of interest) for removal, but Google doesn't always take them down. A review can't be removed just for being negative.

Is it okay to offer a discount in exchange for a review?

No. Paying for or incentivizing reviews violates Google's policies and can get your whole profile suspended. Ask for honest feedback instead.

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