Google reviews are not just feedback.
They’re a public record of how you treat people.
Most potential customers won’t read every review. But they will skim for a pattern: do you show up, do you take it seriously, and do you handle problems like an adult. Replying well is one of the simplest ways to make your reputation visible on your Google Business Profile.
And if you’ve been avoiding replies because you don’t know what to say (or you’re worried you’ll say the wrong thing), you’re not alone.
AI can help. Not by writing “perfect marketing copy”. Just by helping you get to a clear, human response faster — in your words.
A review reply does three jobs at once:
Forget clever. Forget long.
A good reply is usually:
If a reply needs a “formula”, it’s this:
Acknowledge → Appreciate → (If needed) Address → Next step
That’s it.
AI doesn’t ruin replies. Generic replies ruin replies.
The difference is the input you give it.
If you paste only the review, you’ll get a bland response.
If you paste the review plus a sentence or two of real context, you’ll get something you can actually use.
A practical rule:
Also: don’t chase perfection. Chase “sounds like a decent person wrote this”.
You don’t need anything fancy to reply to reviews.
A few solid free options:
All of these have free access options or free tiers that are fine for review replies.
Use whichever feels easiest to open when you’re busy. Consistency matters more than the tool.
If you’re replying to multiple reviews in a row, do not let the AI “learn” your replies by getting longer and longer. Keep them tight.
Google reviews are not just feedback.
They’re a public record of how you treat people.
Most potential customers won’t read every review. But they will skim for a pattern: do you show up, do you take it seriously, and do you handle problems like a professional.
Replying well is one of the simplest ways to make your reputation visible on your Google Business Profile.
And if you’ve been avoiding replies because you don’t know what to say (or you’re worried you’ll say the wrong thing), you’re not alone.
AI can help. Not by writing “perfect marketing copy”. Just by helping you get to a clear, human response faster — in your words.
A review reply does three jobs at once.
First, it makes the reviewer feel seen. Most people leave a review and never hear back. A good reply is a small moment of respect.
Second, it speaks to the next customer. When someone compares you against two or three nearby options, they’re scanning for “safe choice” signals. Replies are one of those signals.
Third, it shows how you handle friction. Anyone can look good when things go well. A calm, fair reply to a tough review is one of the strongest trust-builders you can leave on your profile.
Forget clever. Forget long.
A good reply is usually short, specific (when possible), warm without being overly familiar, calm without being defensive, and focused on what happens next.
If a reply needs a simple structure, it’s this:
Acknowledge → Appreciate → (If needed) Address → Next step
That’s it.
AI doesn’t ruin replies. Generic replies ruin replies.
The difference is the input you give it.
If you paste only the review, you’ll get a bland response that could belong to any business.
If you paste the review plus a sentence or two of real context, you’ll get something you can actually use.
A practical rule:
AI drafts. You humanise. You own the final words.
Also: don’t chase perfection. Chase “sounds like a decent person wrote this”.
You don’t need anything fancy to reply to reviews.
A few solid free options:
ChatGPT
Google Gemini
Microsoft Copilot
Claude
Use whichever feels easiest to open when you’re busy. Consistency matters more than the tool.
If you’re replying to multiple reviews in a row, don’t let the drafts slowly get longer and more formal. Keep them tight.
In the prompts below, anything in [square brackets] is for you to replace before you send it.
If you do nothing else, always replace:
Replace anything in [square brackets] before you send.
You are helping me write a reply to a Google review on my Google Business Profile.
Rules:
Business type: [e.g., electrician / mechanic / café / plumber]
Business name (optional): [ ]
My tone: [friendly, straightforward, professional]
Reviewer name (if shown): [ ]
REVIEW:
[PASTE REVIEW]
CONTEXT (private notes, not all must be used):
Replace anything in [square brackets] before you send.
Write a reply to this positive Google review.
Requirements:
REVIEW:
[PASTE REVIEW]
OPTIONAL CONTEXT:
Replace anything in [square brackets] before you send.
Write a reply to this short/neutral Google review.
Requirements:
REVIEW:
[PASTE REVIEW]
OPTIONAL CONTEXT:
Replace anything in [square brackets] before you send.
Help me write a calm, professional reply to this negative Google review.
Requirements:
REVIEW:
[PASTE REVIEW]
CONTEXT (private notes):
Replace anything in [square brackets] before you send.
Write a reply where we clearly take responsibility and show how we’ve improved.
Requirements:
REVIEW:
[PASTE REVIEW]
CONTEXT:
When the AI gives you a draft, do three quick passes.
First: cut fluff. Remove any line that sounds like it belongs on a poster.
“We strive to…”
“Customer satisfaction is our top priority…”
“We’re delighted…”
Second: add one human detail (if true). Even small specifics change the feel.
“Glad we could get that sorted the same day.”
“Appreciate you trusting us with the switchboard upgrade.”
“Thanks for the patience while we chased the part.”
Third: make it sound like you. If you would never say a word out loud, delete it.
If you do nothing else:
Reply to new negative reviews quickly.
Reply to a handful of positive reviews each week.
Keep replies short enough that you’ll actually do them.
A reputation isn’t built in a single big moment.
It’s built in small moments that are visible to other people.
Review replies are one of the rare habits that are both quick and public.
If you’ve been leaving reviews unreplied to, don’t turn it into a project.
Start with the last five.
Reply like a real person.
Be clear. Be fair. Be present.
That alone makes you look like the safer choice when someone is deciding who to trust on Google.