Your craftsmanship speaks for itself — to the people who see it. But the homeowner searching Google right now? They see your competitor with 200 reviews and your profile with 31. They don't know your work is better. They never will. Because they're calling the other guy. Here's how to make sure every finished project turns into a review, automatically.
You just finished a kitchen renovation that the client is over the moon about. They're posting photos to their personal Instagram, showing the neighbors, telling everyone at dinner. Word of mouth is alive and well. But Google doesn't know any of that.
Google sees 31 reviews, a 4.4 rating, and a profile that hasn't gotten a new review in 6 weeks. The contractor across town? 200 reviews, 4.7 rating, new reviews every week. Same quality of work — maybe worse. But when someone searches "kitchen remodel contractor near me," guess who shows up first.
Contracting is a high-trust, high-ticket business. People are handing you the keys to their home and writing you a $15,000 check. They're reading every single review. And if you don't have enough of them, you're not even in the conversation.
The average contractor loses 5–10 potential jobs per month simply because they don't show up in Google's local 3-pack. That's $5,000–$50,000 in missed revenue, depending on your average project size. All because you do great work but don't have the reviews to prove it.
The moment you complete a project and do the final walkthrough is the peak emotional moment. The client is standing in their new space, seeing the finished product for the first time. Set your CRM to send an automated text that evening or the next morning. "Hey [name], hope you're loving the new [project]. If you have a minute, a Google review would mean a lot: [link]."
Generic requests get generic results. Reference the actual project: "How's the new deck holding up?" or "Hope the kitchen is everything you imagined." This gives the client a starting point for their review and makes the message feel personal, not automated. The more specific your prompt, the more detailed (and valuable) the review.
If they don't respond to the first message, send one follow-up 3–5 days later. "No pressure at all — just wanted to send the link one more time in case it got buried." That's it. Two messages total. Contracting is a relationship business — you don't want to be the guy who bugs people. Most reviews come from the first message anyway.
Respond to every review within 24 hours. Thank them, reference the project, mention your team by name. Then screenshot the best reviews and post them on your social media, website, and proposals. A great review isn't just for Google — it's content you can use everywhere. One detailed review about a bathroom remodel can help close the next bathroom remodel.
Here's what contractors are actually using in 2026, from budget-friendly to fully managed:
| Tool | Best For | Starting Price | Review Automation | SMS Support |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jobber | Field service + basic reviews | $49/mo | Built-in post-job requests | Yes |
| Podium | Dedicated review platform | $249/mo | Advanced, multi-platform | Yes |
| NiceJob | Review-focused, simple setup | $75/mo | Automated sequences | Yes |
| GoHighLevel | All-in-one CRM + reviews | $97/mo | Built-in, fully automated | Yes |
| Handled (done-for-you) | Don't want to set it up yourself | $500–$2,500 | Full setup + optimization | Yes — we configure it all |
15 minutes. Tell us your current review situation, and we'll map out exactly how to fix it — whether you hire us or not.
Book Your Free Call1. Waiting until the project is "fully" done. Punch list items can drag on for weeks. Don't wait for perfection — send the review request after the main work is complete and the client has expressed satisfaction during the walkthrough. If there are minor items to finish, handle those separately. The emotional peak is at substantial completion, not when you come back to caulk one more seam.
2. Only asking on big projects. A $2,000 fence repair generates just as valid a review as a $50,000 kitchen renovation. And smaller projects mean more frequent reviews, which Google loves. The contractor with 200 reviews from a mix of small and large projects outranks the one with 40 reviews from major renovations only. Volume and recency win.
3. Not using photos in responses. When you respond to a review, you can't add photos on Google directly — but you can reference the project and encourage the client to add photos to their review. "So glad you love the deck, [name]! If you get a chance to add a photo, it really helps other homeowners see what's possible." Reviews with photos get significantly more engagement.
3 review request messages that actually work for contractors.
15 minutes. No pitch. No deck. Just tell us your current review situation and we'll tell you exactly how to fix it.
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