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7 reasons hotels should respond to bad reviews

bad online review of a hotel

That nasty review of your hotel isn’t as bad as the one above, but they still gave you only one star because they found mold on the walls in the bathroom.

Or the drunks in the next room carried on all night.

Or the surly waitress in your restaurant smelled like cigarette smoke. 

When you get a bad review online, like at TripAdvisor or Yelp, that’s bad publicity, period. You must take the time to respond. Here’s why:

1. It shows you care and that you take complaints seriously. Not responding is akin to saying “no comment.”

2. It gives you a chance to apologize and fix the problem.

3. In certain cases, you can offer unhappy customers something to make up for the less-than-stellar service, like a free dessert with their next meal.

4. It gives you a chance to correct the record if the complaint includes inaccuracies. But don’t argue, and don’t sound defensive.

5. Your comment might discourage other unhappy guests, some who just like to complain, from piling on.

6. If a journalist or blogger wants to write about you, and their research includes checking you out at these sites, you want to be there and put your best foot forward because it could affect what they write.

7. Your comments might be read not only by the person who wrote the bad review, but by thousands of other potential guests. Remember, bad reviews sometimes live online forever.  
 

How to Respond to Bad Reviews

Read this very helpful article on Top tips for hotels when responding to reviews on TripAdvisor. It was written by Brian Payea, head of industry relations at TripAdvisor, and much of it is equally helpful for any business that gets a bad review online and has a chance to respond. 

I’d add one thing to Payea’s list. Don’t comment on bad reviews when you’re angry. Cool off first. You need to be rational, level-headed and empathetic.  

You can also watch these videos of how two businesses respond to to bad reviews on Yelp and hear how one business owner actually can sometimes turn a bad review into a good one.

Have you responded to reviews, good or bad, at these consumer review sites? What was the result?

by Joan Stewart on October 21, 2012

Filed Under: Public Relations Tagged With: Consumer Reviews, yelp

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Davina K. Brewer says

    October 24, 2012 at 10:04 am

    I realize they can be gamed, sock puppets or competition fakes (and theses sites need to guard against that) but so many of these are legit – businesses can live or die via real reviews, so it’s an important part of online/social reputation management. I’m a TripAdvisor (and starting to like Yelp via the app) and just like Facebook comments, I believe in replying to valid criticism.

    #2 is HUGE. This is free data, info for you to ID some problems, fix them. And it gives insights on what people really wanted, how to manage those expectations. Equally big is #7 – others are reading, watching – potential customers and as you mentioned, media.

    Couple other points, FWIW:
    – Don’t look just for negative reviews. Even a positive review can highlight an issue or area for improvement, pay attention.
    – Don’t reply only to negative. I’ve seen more ‘thanks for the feedback’ type comments on positive reviews; also shows the management cares, listens, wants to earn business.

    Reply
    • Joan says

      October 24, 2012 at 10:50 am

      Davina, I’m so glad you added the recommendation to respond to GOOD reviews. I should have mentioned that. Thanks for stopping by and contributing your expertise.

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Bad Customer Service? You Can Be ReplacedBad Customer Service? You Can Be Replaced says:
    November 14, 2012 at 8:05 am

    […] You are the problem – if you’re the hotel manager that ignores valid, negative criticism. (And yes, you totally should reply to bad reviews.) […]

    Reply

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Publicity expert Joan Stewart, a PR mentor aka The Publicity Hound, works with small business owners who need free publicity, and with PR pros who tell their clients' stories to the world. She shows you how to establish your credibility, enhance your reputation, position yourself as an expert, and sell more products and services. To receive her free DIY publicity tips twice a week, subscribe here. See all the ways you can work with Joan. Or contact her and ask a burning question about PR, self-promotion or social media.

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