In the local SEO industry, we are rapidly seeing businesses transition from being empowered “website owners” to “Google tenants,” with more and more user actions taking place within Google’s interface. The May removal of reviews should be another blow to your local brand:
Make sure you have an ongoing, guideline-compliant Google review acquisition campaign in place to replace filtered-out reviews with new reviews.
Take a proactive approach to monitoring your GMB reviews so you’re aware of changes early.
Diversify your presence on review platforms beyond Google
Collect reviews and testimonials directly from your canada number data to place on your own website. Don't forget schema markup while you're at it.
Diversify the ways in which you are promoting positive customer sentiment offline. Word of mouth marketing, loyalty programs, and developing real-world relationships with your customers are something you directly control.
Continue to collect these email addresses and, following the laws of your country, promote non-Google-dependent lines of communication with your users.
Invest heavily in hiring and training practices that empower staff to offer customers the best possible experience at the point of service — it’s the best way to ensure you’re building a strong reputation both on and offline.
Q: So, what should Google do after reviewing spam?
A: A Google representative once famously said ,
In the local SEO industry,
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