Before booking a room, choosing a restaurant, or contacting a real estate agent, 93% of consumers check online reviews. This isn’t a passing trend: it’s the new word of mouth, amplified at digital scale and available 24 hours a day to anyone, anywhere in the world.
What many hotels, restaurants, and real estate agencies in Bogotá, Medellín, Cartagena, Mexico City, Miami, and Orlando haven’t fully grasped yet is that reviews aren’t just reputation: they are sales. An improvement from 4.2 to 4.6 stars on Google can increase your listing’s click-through rate by 30%. A hotel with 400 reviews and 4.5 stars appears before one with 4.8 and 50 reviews on Google Maps. A restaurant that actively responds to its reviews converts more than one that ignores them. Online reputation management isn’t a public relations exercise: it’s a measurable growth lever. To understand how this work integrates into a broader local strategy, the article on how to manage online reviews to improve your reputation offers a practical implementation framework.
Why reviews directly impact your sales and positioning
Online reviews operate on two simultaneous dimensions that many businesses treat separately but that in reality reinforce each other:
Dimension 1: consumer behavior
Reviews directly influence the purchase decision. The data is compelling:
- 88% of consumers trust online reviews as much as a personal recommendation.
- 72% of travelers don’t book a hotel until they’ve read reviews.
- A one-star increase in a restaurant’s average rating on Yelp or Google can increase revenue by 5% to 9%.
- 45% of users say they wouldn’t choose a business with a rating below 4 stars.
For hotels, restaurants, and real estate agencies, this translates into a direct, measurable impact on conversion rates: more and better reviews equal more clicks, more contacts, and more bookings or leads.
Dimension 2: Google ranking
Reviews are one of the most important ranking factors in the Google Maps algorithm. Google considers three main signals:
- Quantity: how many reviews the business has in total.
- Quality: what the average rating is.
- Frequency: how regularly new reviews arrive and whether the business actively responds.
A business that receives 10 new reviews per month and responds to all of them within 48 hours outranks a competitor with a better average rating but no recent activity. The algorithm interprets activity as relevance and trustworthiness.
Reputation management for hotels: the complete cycle
For a hotel, online reputation is built at every touchpoint of the guest cycle. It doesn’t begin after check-out: it begins before the booking and extends well beyond check-out.
Before the stay: the reputation that converts
The potential guest arrives at your Google, TripAdvisor, or Booking listing with a decision almost made: they’re looking for confirmation. Your reviews are the final argument. That’s why average rating, review volume, and the quality of the hotel’s responses to negative comments determine whether that user books with you or with the competition.
What your listing needs to convert:
- Minimum 4.3-star rating on Google (below this threshold, conversion rates drop dramatically).
- At least 100 active reviews on Google, plus presence on TripAdvisor and Booking.
- Responses to all negative reviews, signed by the hotel director or manager.
- Brief, grateful responses to positive reviews that show brand personality.
During the stay: preventing the negative review
The best reputation management is proactive. A mid-stay satisfaction survey — sent automatically 24 hours after arrival — allows identifying and resolving problems before they become a 1-star review. A dissatisfied guest whose problem is resolved during the stay rarely writes a negative review. One who wasn’t attended to almost always does.
After the stay: building the reputation asset
The post-checkout review request is the highest-impact action in building online reputation. Implemented correctly:
- Sent between 2 and 6 hours after check-out.
- With a direct link to the review platform (Google takes priority for its local SEO impact).
- Personalized with the guest’s name and a reference to their stay.
- Without incentives (Google explicitly prohibits incentivized reviews).
A hotel that consistently implements this sequence can go from 50 to 300 reviews in six months — with the corresponding impact on ranking and conversion rates.
Reputation management for restaurants: speed, volume, and visibility
In the restaurant sector, online reputation has a faster impact speed than any other vertical. A viral negative review can impact a weekend’s occupancy. A streak of positive reviews can fill the dining room within days.
Google Maps: the battle that matters most
For a restaurant, Google Maps is the most important battlefield of online reputation. 62% of local restaurant searches result in a visit the same day. And most of those searches happen on Google Maps.
The three variables that determine your position on Google Maps for restaurant searches are exactly the same as for hotels: review quantity, average rating, and activity frequency. But in restaurants, review volume tends to be higher because customer turnover is greater. This also means a streak of negative reviews can impact the rating more quickly.
The response protocol that turns criticism into opportunity
How a restaurant responds to a negative review can be more powerful than the review itself. Users who read negative reviews also read the business’s responses, and an empathetic, professional, solution-oriented response generates more trust than a listing with no negative reviews at all (which can seem suspiciously perfect).
Negative review response protocol:
- Thank the diner for taking the time to write the review.
- Acknowledge the described experience without defensiveness or excuses.
- Offer a concrete solution or an invitation to continue the conversation through a private channel.
- Sign with name and title (the manager or owner — not “the team”).
- Respond within 24 hours — response speed is itself a signal of professionalism.
TripAdvisor and specialized platforms
Although Google carries more weight in local ranking, TripAdvisor remains decisive for restaurants in tourist destinations. A restaurant in Cartagena, Medellín, or Miami that doesn’t actively manage its TripAdvisor presence is losing visibility to international tourists who use that platform as their primary reference.
For a systematic approach to building a positive reputation, the article on online review management: building a positive reputation for your restaurant details the step-by-step process with examples adaptable to different types of establishment.
Reputation management for real estate agencies: trust that closes sales
In real estate, online reputation serves a different function than in hotels and restaurants: it doesn’t generate an immediate purchase decision, but it’s the factor that makes a prospect decide to contact your agency instead of the competition when evaluating options.
Google and specialized directories
For real estate agencies, the most relevant reputation platforms are Google Business Profile, Zillow (in the United States), Finca Raíz and Metrocuadrado (in Colombia), and local directories in each market. The strategy differs by platform:
- Google: absolute priority for its impact on local SEO and the prospect’s first impression.
- Zillow/Realtor (Miami, Orlando): platforms where international buyers verify agent reputation before contacting them. Reviews here carry specific weight for the high-value buyer segment.
- Social media: buyer testimonials on LinkedIn, Instagram, and Facebook act as high-credibility social proof for prospects in the early stages of the funnel.
Video testimonials: the most persuasive format
In real estate, a video testimonial from a satisfied buyer is worth more than ten written reviews. The combination of face, voice, and emotion generates a level of trust that text simply cannot match. For high-value projects in Miami or housing projects in Medellín, video testimonials distributed on social media and on the project’s website are among the most powerful conversion assets available.
How to build an online reputation management system
Reputation management can’t depend on the team’s memory or availability. It requires a system with defined processes, appropriate tools, and a regular review cadence.
The 4 pillars of an effective reputation system
1. Continuous monitoring Using alert tools (Google Alerts, platforms like Reputation.com, ReviewTrackers, or simply activated notifications on each platform) to know in real time when a new review arrives — on any platform.
2. Response protocol Defining who responds, within what timeframe, and with what tone. The protocol must address three types of review: positive, negative, and neutral. Responses should never be generic copies: each response must specifically reference the content of the review.
3. Active review request system Not waiting for satisfied customers to write spontaneously. 77% of customers write a review if asked directly and the process is simple. The request should be integrated into the post-service flow: automatic email, WhatsApp message, physical card with QR at the hotel or restaurant.
4. Analysis and continuous improvement Reviews are high-value qualitative feedback. A monthly analysis of review trends — what repeats positively, what resurfaces as a complaint — is a source of business intelligence that many operational teams completely underutilize.
Case studies: online reputation that changed the business
Boutique hotel in Medellín: from 4.1 to 4.7 stars in five months
A boutique hotel in El Poblado had 4.1 stars on Google with 43 reviews and appeared in position 14 for relevant searches in its area. After implementing a post-checkout review request system via WhatsApp, a response protocol within 24 hours for all reviews, and a mid-stay survey to prevent negative reviews, it reached 4.7 stars with 218 reviews in five months. Its Google Maps position for “boutique hotel El Poblado” moved from 14th to 3rd. Direct bookings grew by 28% in the same period, largely attributable to improved visibility and conversion.
Restaurant in Miami: crisis management that strengthened the brand
A Latin American restaurant in Miami’s Wynwood neighborhood received a viral 1-star negative review describing a real service error. Instead of ignoring it or responding defensively, the manager responded publicly within 4 hours with a genuine apology, an explanation of the error, and a personal invitation to return. The response generated more than 200 positive reactions from other users who appreciated the transparency. In the following weeks, the restaurant received 40 spontaneous reviews from customers who wanted to “balance” the narrative. The rating climbed from 4.1 to 4.5, and the crisis management story became organic social media content.
Real estate agency in Bogotá: testimonials that shortened the sales cycle
A real estate agency in northern Bogotá implemented a video testimonial program with satisfied buyers, distributed on its Instagram and LinkedIn profiles and on each project’s page on its website. Behavioral analysis showed that prospects who watched at least one testimonial before contacting the agency had a visit conversion rate of 41%, compared to 17% for those who arrived without having seen one. The average sales cycle was reduced by 23 days.
Online reputation management support with Digisap
At Digisap we integrate online reputation management as part of each client’s digital strategy — not as a separate service. Because reputation impacts local SEO, campaign conversion rates, and customer retention: it’s transversal to everything.
Our work includes:
- Current reputation audit: analysis of rating, review volume, response time, and presence across all relevant platforms for the business.
- Review request system setup: integration with the booking engine, CRM, or business management system to automate post-service requests.
- Response protocol: design of tone, structure, and response timing adapted to each client’s brand voice.
- Monitoring and alerts: configuration of monitoring tools that notify in real time of every new review across all platforms.
- Monthly reports: tracking of rating evolution, review volume, and Google Maps position with improvement recommendations.
Do you know exactly how your business appears when someone searches for it on Google today?
The answer to that question determines how many potential customers you’re converting and how many you’re losing every week. Request your free Digisap diagnosis and within 48 hours we’ll analyze your current online reputation, your Google Maps position, and which concrete actions can improve your rating and visibility in the next 90 days.
FAQs about online reputation management
Can I delete a negative Google review?
Only if it violates Google’s policies (spam, inappropriate content, verifiable conflict of interest). Legitimate negative reviews can’t be deleted. The correct strategy is to respond professionally and generate enough positive reviews to dilute their impact on the average rating.
How often should I respond to reviews?
Ideally within the first 24 hours for negative reviews and within 48 to 72 hours for positive ones. Response speed is itself a professionalism signal for users reading reviews — and for Google’s algorithm.
Do reviews on Booking or TripAdvisor impact Google SEO?
Not directly. But they impact the user’s purchase decision, which may end with them searching for the hotel or restaurant on Google and booking through the direct channel. Additionally, the volume of mentions of your business across different platforms indirectly contributes to your online brand authority.
Can I ask customers to change or delete a negative review?
It’s not recommended. Directly requesting a review modification can generate more friction and an even more negative review. The best strategy is to respond professionally, resolve the issue if it’s still open, and invite the customer to return. If the experience improves, many users spontaneously update their review.
How many new reviews do I need per month to maintain good Google Maps positioning?
It depends on competition in your area and vertical, but as a reference: in medium-competitive markets like Medellín or Bogotá, between 8 and 15 monthly reviews is sufficient to maintain activity and positioning. In more competitive markets like Miami, the threshold may be 20 to 30 new reviews per month to stay in the top 3.
Your online reputation already exists — the question is who’s managing it
Reviews about your hotel, restaurant, or real estate agency are already out there, whether there are 10 or 500. The potential customer is reading them right now while deciding whether to contact you or not. The difference between businesses that grow with their online reputation and those that leave it to chance isn’t in the product or service: it’s in the consistency and strategy with which they manage every review, every response, and every feedback request.
At Digisap we build that consistency for every client, with systems that generate more reviews, improve average ratings, and turn online reputation into a measurable, sustainable competitive advantage.
Schedule a personalized consultation and discover how we can transform your business’s online reputation into a real source of growth.