You've got a Google Business profile. Maybe Yelp. Maybe Tripadvisor. Reviews trickle in every week — some glowing, some lukewarm, one or two that make your blood pressure spike.
You know you should respond to all of them. Responding to reviews signals to Google that you're active, it shows potential customers that you care, and it can actually flip a 3-star experience into a loyal return customer.
But sitting down to write a thoughtful response to 12 different reviews? That's an hour you don't have.
Here are 3 things you can start doing this week to fix that.
3 Ways to Handle Reviews Faster (Without Losing the Personal Touch)
Batch Positive Reviews Into a 20-Minute Session
Most business owners respond to reviews one at a time, as they come in. That's inefficient. Instead, block 20 minutes once a week. Open every unanswered positive review side by side, then use this prompt to draft responses for all of them at once:
You'll get 5 drafts in about 10 seconds. Read each one, make any small tweaks, and copy-paste them in. Done in 20 minutes instead of an hour.
Use AI to Stay Professional When a Review Makes You Want to Scream
Negative reviews are emotionally charged. Responding while angry is a mistake you can't take back — and potential customers are watching how you handle it.
Before you type anything, paste the negative review into AI with this framing:
The response you get will be more measured than anything you'd write in the moment — and it opens the door to fixing the relationship privately rather than fighting in public.
Turn 5-Star Reviews Into Social Media Posts
Your best reviews are testimonials. Most business owners never use them. After you respond to a great review, drop it into AI with this prompt:
Now you have a social post ready to go. One piece of content becomes two. You're building credibility in two places at once, with almost zero extra work.
Want the Full Playbook?
Those three tips will save you real time. But they're just the start. The patterns that move the needle the most — especially for handling angry reviews and building a monthly review management routine — are in the next section.