How to Get More Google Reviews for Your Barbershop
Reviews Are the Most Underused Growth Tool for Barbershops
Most barbershop owners know reviews matter. But very few actually have a system for getting them. They rely on the occasional client who leaves one on their own, which means they end up with 12 reviews while the shop down the street has 200.
The shop with 200 reviews isn't necessarily better. They just asked. Here's how to build a review engine for your barbershop without being annoying about it.
Why Google Reviews Matter So Much
When someone searches "barbershop near me," Google shows a map with three shops (the Map Pack). The shops that appear there have three things in common: a complete Google Business Profile, lots of reviews, and high ratings.
- Reviews boost your ranking. Google uses review count and rating as direct ranking signals for local search. More (genuine) reviews = higher placement.
- Reviews build trust instantly. A new client choosing between two shops will almost always pick the one with 150 reviews at 4.8 stars over the one with 8 reviews at 5.0 stars. Volume matters.
- Reviews are free marketing. Every review is a mini-testimonial that works 24/7. Potential clients read them before they ever walk through your door or book online.
If you haven't claimed your Google Business Profile yet, do that first. Here's our step-by-step guide to getting your barbershop on Google.
1. Ask Every Happy Client Right After the Cut
Timing is everything. The best moment to ask for a review is right when the client is looking in the mirror, feeling good about their fresh cut. Not a week later by email. Not in a text the next day. Right then.
Keep it casual: "Hey, if you've got a sec, it would mean a lot if you left us a quick Google review. It really helps us out." That's it. Most people will say yes if you ask directly and the experience was good.
Don't ask every single person every single time. If someone's a regular and they've already left a review, don't keep asking. Focus on first-time or newer clients who haven't reviewed yet.
2. Send a Follow-Up With a Direct Link
Some clients will say "sure, I'll do it later" and then forget. That's normal. Make it easy by sending them a link.
- Get your direct Google review link. Search for your shop on Google, click "Write a review," and copy that URL. You can also use Google's Place ID tool to generate a direct link.
- Send the link via text or email after the appointment. Keep the message short: "Thanks for coming in today! If you have a minute, we'd really appreciate a Google review: [link]"
- If your booking software sends post-appointment emails, include the review link in those.
3. Make It Easy With a QR Code
Generate a QR code that links directly to your Google review page. Print it and put it:
- At each station/mirror (clients can scan while you're finishing up)
- On a small card you hand to clients at checkout
- On a poster or sticker near the door
- In your Instagram bio link page
The fewer steps between "I had a good experience" and "I left a review," the more reviews you'll get. QR codes cut it down to one step: point your phone, tap, write.
4. Respond to Every Review
This is the step most shops skip, and it's a mistake. Responding to reviews matters for two reasons:
- SEO signal. Google sees that you're an active, engaged business. Owner responses are a positive ranking factor.
- Social proof. When potential clients read reviews and see that the owner responds personally, it builds trust. It shows you care about feedback.
For positive reviews, keep it simple: "Thanks, [name]! Glad you liked the cut. See you next time." You don't need to write a paragraph.
For critical reviews, stay professional. Acknowledge the issue, apologize if appropriate, and offer to make it right. Never argue publicly. Other potential clients are reading the exchange.
5. Don't Buy Fake Reviews
This should be obvious, but it's worth saying: don't buy reviews, don't ask friends who've never visited to leave one, and don't offer discounts or free services in exchange for reviews (Google's terms prohibit incentivized reviews).
- Google's algorithms are good at detecting fake reviews. They look at patterns: multiple reviews from new accounts, reviews from people outside your area, sudden spikes in review volume.
- If Google flags your reviews as suspicious, they'll remove them and it can hurt your overall ranking.
- Worst case, your Business Profile gets suspended. It's not worth it.
Build reviews the real way: provide great service, ask real clients, and make it easy.
6. Handle Negative Reviews Professionally
Every shop gets a bad review eventually. It doesn't matter how good you are. Someone will have a bad day, or miscommunicate what they wanted, or just be hard to please. Here's how to handle it:
- Don't ignore it. An unanswered negative review looks worse than the review itself.
- Don't get defensive. Even if the client is wrong, a defensive response makes you look bad to everyone else reading.
- Acknowledge and offer to fix it. "Hey [name], sorry to hear your experience wasn't great. We'd love to make it right. Give us a call at [number] and we'll sort it out."
- Move the conversation offline. Don't go back and forth in public. One response offering a resolution is enough.
A handful of negative reviews among dozens of positive ones actually makes your profile look more authentic. Nobody trusts a business with 100 reviews that are all perfect 5-stars.
How Many Reviews Do You Need?
There's no magic number, but here are some benchmarks:
- Under 10 reviews: You're invisible to most searchers. This is your first priority.
- 10-50 reviews: You're credible. Clients will consider you.
- 50-150 reviews: You're a strong contender in local search. This is where most well-run shops land.
- 150+: You're dominating your area. Keep going.
Aim to get 2-3 new reviews per week. At that pace, you'll hit 100+ within a year. That sounds slow, but consistency beats burst campaigns every time.
Tie It All Together
Getting reviews isn't a one-time project. It's a habit. Build it into your daily routine: ask after every great cut, have the QR code visible, send a follow-up link, respond to what comes in.
Combined with a solid Google Business Profile and smart barbershop marketing, reviews are one of the most powerful (and free) ways to fill your chairs.
Ready to try Clipd?
Set up your booking page in under 5 minutes. No credit card required.
Get started free →