Online consumers rely on reviews to make virtually every purchase: Amazon for a new coffee maker, Trip Advisor for an upcoming vacation to Costa Rica, Google to find a good handyman, Yelp for a fun tapas restaurant.
In fact, nineout of 10 customersactively seek out reviews before they buy. Impartial opinions from previous shoppers help them make a decision, especially if they’re mistrustful of polished brand messages.
Getting people to leave reviews is hard, but it’s essential to giving customers the information they need exactly when they need it and improving your marketing strategy.
Here’s how to encourage shoppers to share their experiences and where you should display reviews:
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The benefits of good ecommerce product reviews
- Encourages recommendations.Eighty-four percentof shoppers trust business reviews as much as word-of-mouth marketing and personal recommendations, which can also increase your online presence.
- Supercharges your content library.Spent ages tweaking your launch email to get it “just right”? Reviews are trusted more than other marketing materials, making them an integral part of the buying process.
- Boosts credibility.Forty-nine percentof shoppers say they trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations.
- Improves customer perception.The better quality reviews you have, the more value shoppers assign to your brand and its products.
While trust-building is a key benefit of reviews, reviews also bolster your efforts in other areas, fromsearch engine optimizationtogaining valuable product insights.
- Enhances SEO efforts.Google’s algorithm gives pages with consumer reviews higher rankings on search engines, plus the added word count means there’s more opportunity for relevant keywords.
- Creates personalized customer experiences.Provide different product perspectives and give shoppers an insight into how customers who are the same size, shape, or skin type as them found a product.
- Identifies relevant keywords.Reviews give you an insight into the actual keywords your customers use.
- Improves product development.Use the experiences and opinions of your customers to get feedback and improve your products.
You don’t need tons of reviews to reap these benefits. While you don’t need a review fromevery single customer,the more you can secure, the better.
7 easy ways to get more positive reviews for your online store
Nine times out of 10, customers won’t leave a review if left to their own devices. In fact, you’remore likelyto get a review from an unhappy customer who wants to vent about their experience than a customer who enjoyed your product and would recommend it.
This is why it’s crucial to encourage customers to leave reviews—especially if they’ve had a positive experience.
1. Ask
It sounds simple, but the majority of customers won’t leave a review unless you explicitly ask for review requests. You can send customer feedback surveys or prompt the customer to leave a review directly on your site.
The easiest way to do this is to send a well-timed email or SMS message that encourages them to leave a review. But make sure you give them enough time to actually use your product—81% of shoppersare more likely to leave a review after they’ve used the product more than once.
Casper sends a simple review request email with an on-brand message to past buyers, inviting them to share their thoughts.
When is the best time to send a review request email?
The timing will ultimately depend on the type of product you’re selling and your potential customers.One studyrecommends different timeframes for different types of products. For hard goods (or products that last a long time), like fridges and washing machines, it recommends waiting 21 days.
Perishables and soft goods, like cosmetics, clothing, and food, need less “trying” time, so you can send an email within 14 days. And the timely nature of seasonal goods means it’s best to send a review request email within seven days.
The same study reveals that review request emails sent on Wednesdays and Saturdays have the highest conversion rates and that it’s crucial forecommerce brandsto follow up seven days after sending the first email. While 68% of customers leave a review after being asked once, an additional 28% will leave a review the second time you ask them, and a further 4% the third time.
This review request email from Skin Mart is clearly a follow-up email and even adds in a reward for customers based on the depth of their review.
2. Make it easy
The easier it is to leave a review, the more likely customers are to do so. The last thing they want to do is jump through hoops when they’ve already received their product.
Walk shoppers through the process, give them guidance at every step, and eliminate any potential friction by:
- Reducing (or, ideally, fixing) any technical issues
- 创建尽可能少的字段和接触点
- Prompting them with questions to answer
Your ecommerce platform likely has tools available to make getting reviews easier. Shopify, for example has many different apps you can use to get more reviews:
Pricing varies, but most come with a free version.
3. Incentivize shoppers
Everyone likes to get something for free, and73% of consumerssay they’d be inclined to leave a review if offered an incentive. This could be a freebie, a discount on their next purchase, or additional loyalty points.
For example, Camera Ready Cosmetics offers shoppers a percentage off their next purchase.
What kind of incentives should you offer?
Again, this will depend on your product and audience. If you sell high-ticket electronics, shoppers might prefer a discount on their next purchase over a freebie, while someone buying makeup might be interested in a freebie to try out a new product.
Here are some incentives you can offer thathave been backed by data:
- 91% of shoppers would like to receive the product free of charge.
- 85% would like to receive the product before it’s released.
- 67% would like a discount on future products.
- 59% would like loyalty points.
You can even offer a sliding scale of perks depending on the depth of the review.
For example, customers who submit a photo with their review might get 15% off their next purchase, as opposed to 10% off if they leave just a written review.
LSKD offers three levels of incentives for its shoppers—a 10%-off coupon for a written review, a 15%-off coupon for a photo review, and a 20%-off coupon for a video review.
In a similar vein, the Skin Mart review request email above offers shoppers 75 member points for leaving a written review, plus an extra 25 points for customers who submit a photo or video as well.
4. Respond to reviews
More than halfof consumers expect businesses to respond to negative reviews within a week. It shows you care and are open to receiving customer feedback.
On top of this, your response should be in some way personalized. Shoppers overall are more willing to buy from an ecommerce store that responds to positive and negative reviews.
Yappy responds to every customer review with a personalized, pun-packed message.
Starting a dialogue with customers who have taken the time to share their experience secures trust and credibility, but it also gives you a chance to win back shoppers who might have had a less-than-stellar experience.
Don’t push out a blanket response to every review, though. Instead:
- Personalized each response with the shopper’s name, at the very least
- Answer questions, but don’t get defensive in response to negative reviews
- Invite customers who have had a negative experience to connect with you somewhere else, like via email or an official customer support channel
ModCloth responds well to a frustrated customer by apologizing and directing them to the customer care team.
5. Don’t be afraid of negative reviews
Shoppers don’t just want to see positive reviews—they want opinions from all angles. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, since users spendfive times as longon sites when they’re interacting with bad reviews.
Take a leaf out of ModCloth’s book, above, and respond in a calm and neutral manner to negative reviews. Alternatively, you can create a two-step review process where shoppers are first invited to give a star rating.
Those that give a high star rating are then invited to leave a public review, while those that give a lesser star rating are invited to provide feedback so you have the chance to rectify the experience before their review goes live on your site.
6. Always be honest about reviews
Winning the trust of consumers is the key to long-term success, so it’s crucial that you’re always honest about reviews—both good and bad.
Be very careful not to alter negative reviews or delete them, or you might end up in a sticky situation, like Fashion Nova. The brand had to pay a $4.2 million finefor suppressing negative reviewsand lost a lot of trust with its buyers.
Before you start collecting reviews, make sure you read up on theFTC’s guidelines, which include:
- Not asking for fake reviews from people who haven’t used your product
- Not limiting review request emails to customers you think had a positive experience
- Not placing conditions on incentives
Prospective customers expect there to be a healthy mix of reviews, and only having glowing five-star experiences on your site can raise alarm bells. Instead, provide shoppers with an experience from every perspective so they can make an informed decision that’s best for their own wants and needs.
7. List your store on review sites
Here are some top customer and productreview sitesto get more testimonials from:
- Amazon
- Angie’s List
- Trustpilot
- ConsumerReports
- Consumer Affairs
- Google My Business
- TripAdvisor
- Influenster
- Trustspot
- Yelp
- Power Reviews
Where to display online reviews for maximum impact
Once you’ve started collecting customer reviews, what do you do with them?
For best results, sprinkle them throughout the sales cycle, giving shoppers a dose of social proof when they might have an objection.
Most retailers benefit from displaying their reviews on:
Product pages
Add reviews to their relevantproduct pagesalongside eachproduct descriptionso customers can browse perspectives from people with the same attributes as them.
Quick Flick showcases thousands of positive reviews on each page that can be filtered by newest, oldest, most helpful, and those with photos.
Social media
Some 76%of consumers buy products they see in social media posts. Show off your reviews in feed posts and Stories to build trust and interest in your products.
Love Corn has an entire Story Highlight dedicated to customer reviews on Instagram.
Social ads
Reviews add authenticity and social proof to your ads and digital marketing efforts.
In fact, Blenders Eyewear generated atwo times higher click-through rate, a 38% lower CPA, and a 62% higher ROAS by simply adding star reviews to its ads.
Give shoppers a dedicated place they can go to read all the customer reviews they want. This can also boost your SEO efforts by targeting the keyword “[your brand] reviews.”Patagonia’s dedicated reviews pagehas more than 63,500 reviews for shoppers to browse.
Abandoned cart emails
Nearly 70% of shoppersleave their carts without making it to checkout. Adding reviews toabandoned cart emailscan lure them back and remind them why they added an item to their cart in the first place.
It can also help them compare products with competitors. Don’t just limit reviews to abandoned cart emails, though; you can include them in product recommendation emails and other sequences to instill trust and social proof.
Brooklinen’s on-brand abandoned cart email showcases reviews before directing shoppers back to their cart to help with their purchasing decisions.
Get an email marketing software likeKlaviyothat can automate abandoned cart messages. Many ecommerce platforms integrate with Klaviyo in just a few clicks.
Make reviews work for your ecommerce business
Reviews are an integral part of the purchase-making decision for most online buyers. As an online business owner, it’s critical to collect and display them at different touchpoints. Once you have reviews, you can use Shopify’s website builder to add them to your own ecommerce site.
Start by sending out well-timed review request emails and adding an incentive to increase the chances of a customer leaving a review, but don’t forget to respond and deal with negative reviews in an honest fashion.
Once you’ve secured a decent number of customer reviews, you can start populating your ecommerce site, ads, and social media channels with them to boost trust,drive sales, create happy customers, and improve your brand’s online reputation.