Review Management Updated: July 19, 2024

Email Marketing for Review Generation: Campaigns That Actually Work

Email is the most effective channel for generating online reviews at scale. This guide covers the timing, copy, segmentation, and technical setup that make review request campaigns work.

Ryan
Ryan
Contributing Author
2 min read

Why Email Works for Review Generation

Email review requests outperform every other review generation channel for businesses with customer email lists. You control the timing, can personalize the message, segment by satisfaction level, track open and click rates, and run A/B tests to optimize performance. Compared to in-person or in-app requests, email reaches customers when they have a moment to act rather than when they’re busy with the transaction itself.

Timing Your Review Requests

The right timing depends on the nature of your product or service. For restaurants and retail: within 24-48 hours, while the experience is fresh. For hotels: the morning after checkout. For software and SaaS products: after the customer has had enough time to experience meaningful value, typically 7-14 days post-activation. For service businesses: within 24 hours of service completion. Sending too soon or too late reduces response rates significantly.

Writing Review Request Emails That Convert

The most effective review request emails have several characteristics: a personal sender name rather than from “the team,” a specific subject line that references the recent experience, brief and direct body copy that explains why the review matters, a clear single call-to-action linking directly to the review platform, and no incentive language that could violate platform terms of service. Long emails with multiple calls-to-action perform significantly worse than focused, brief ones.

Segmenting for Satisfaction Before Requesting

A powerful tactic: send a one-question satisfaction check before directing customers to a public review platform. Customers who respond positively are directed to Google or your primary review platform. Customers who respond negatively are directed to a private feedback form where you can address the issue before it becomes a public review. This identifies who is likely to have a positive experience worth sharing publicly.

Platform-Specific Compliance

Each major review platform has rules about soliciting reviews. Google permits asking customers for reviews but prohibits offering incentives. Yelp’s terms actively discourage businesses from asking for reviews, preferring organic reviews. Amazon prohibits incentivized reviews. Know the rules for each platform you’re targeting and design your campaigns accordingly.

Ryan
Written by
Ryan
Contributing Author, ORM Authority

An experienced online reputation management professional with a passion for helping individuals and businesses build and protect their digital presence.

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