prime circa

Reputation · 7 min read

The 4-hour rule: why replying to bad reviews fast matters.

By Prime Circa · 2026-05-08

A 1-star review on Google that sits unanswered for a week isn't a 1-star problem. It's a 100-customer problem.

Most owners think bad reviews hurt them once — when the customer writes them. The bigger damage is the next 100 prospective customers who scroll past your listing and see a 1-star sitting there with no reply. They infer something far worse than the review itself: nobody at this business is paying attention.


What the data says

Google's own research shows that businesses responding to reviews — both positive and negative — rank higher in local results. Customers explicitly say they trust businesses more when they see thoughtful replies. A few numbers people consistently cite:

  • 53% of customers expect a business to respond to negative reviews within a week. ~30% expect it within a day.
  • Businesses that respond to at least 25% of reviews see 35% more revenue on average than peers who don't respond at all (source: Womply, 2024).
  • A 1-star review that's replied to thoughtfully reads as almost a positive trust signal. An unanswered one reads as evidence the owner is checked out.

The takeaway: the reply matters more than the review. You can't un-write a 1-star. You can write the reply that turns it into proof you actually care.


Why 4 hours specifically

4 hours isn't a magic number, but it's a useful target for two reasons:

It catches the reviewer's adrenaline window. If you reply in the first few hours, the reviewer is often still emotionally connected to what happened. Many will edit or even soften the review when they see a thoughtful response. Once a day passes, that opportunity vanishes.

It catches Google's indexing window. Google's search results refresh based on signals like review activity. A negative review followed minutes later by an owner reply gets bundled together in early indexing. Replying days later means the bare 1-star floats alone in search results for the duration of the gap.

Most owners can't respond in 4 hours because they're busy running the actual shop. That's the gap.


What a good reply looks like

A good reply does five things:

  1. References the specific complaint. Not "we're sorry about your experience." Specifically: "We're sorry the lunchtime wait pushed past 30 minutes — that's twice our typical."
  2. Acknowledges without admitting fault legally. "That's not the experience we want anyone to have" works. "You're absolutely right, our manager was wrong" opens you up to liability.
  3. Sounds like a person. Not corporate-speak. The reviewer wrote casually; you should too. Use "we" (sounds like a small team) instead of "our team is dedicated to."
  4. Offers a path forward. Invite them to reach out by phone or email so the conversation moves off Google. Don't share private contact in public — just offer to take it offline.
  5. Keeps it short. 35–65 words. Long replies look defensive. Short ones look confident.

Why doing this manually is hard

It's not the writing that's hard. It's the stack of conditions that have to line up:

  • You have to seethe review within hours (you're not refreshing Google all day)
  • You have to write it when you're calm, not when you're still angry
  • You have to phrase it carefully (no liability, no defensiveness)
  • You have to make it specific to that review
  • You have to actually post it

If any of those five fails, you don't reply in 4 hours. That's why most SMBs reply to maybe 10% of their reviews, and almost never within hours.


Where AI fits

AI can do the parts that don't need you:

  • Watching for new reviews 24/7
  • Drafting a specific reply that references the actual content
  • Phrasing it carefully (no admissions, no defensiveness)
  • Keeping it in your voice based on samples

What AI shouldn't do is post replies without you seeing them. The 5% of cases where the AI gets the tone wrong are the ones that make a bad situation worse. A good system drafts and shows; the owner approves in one tap.

A reply that lands within an hour, in your voice, that you approved with a single tap from your phone — that's the target. You don't need to compose the reply. You just need to read it for 5 seconds and approve it.


A note on Yelp

The reply mechanics above all work cleanly for Google reviews. They also work for Facebook, Apple Maps, and Bing — those platforms expose public owner-reply APIs that let third-party tools post on your behalf.

Yelp doesn't. Yelp deprecated their reviews API years ago and has never offered a public endpoint for owner replies. The only path to reply to a Yelp review is to log into biz.yelp.commanually and type it there. That's a Yelp policy choice — every third-party tool faces the same wall.

Vendors that claim "automated Yelp replies" do it by storing your Yelp password and logging in as you via headless browser. That violates Yelp's ToS, gets accounts suspended periodically, and creates a credential-storage liability — if the vendor gets breached, replies could post under your name that you didn't write. We refuse to do that.

What we do instead: read your most-recent Yelp reviews via the public Yelp Fusion API, draft a reply in your voice, and give you a one-tap Copy reply + Open Yelp dashboard button. You paste, you post. About 20 seconds vs. the 20 minutes a lawyer-aware reply takes from scratch.

It's a worse UX than the auto-post path on Google. It's also the only honest option until Yelp ships an API. If Yelp ever does, we'll lift the copy/paste step automatically.

Service

Vera — replies to every review, in your voice, within an hour

Vera watches your reviews across Google, Yelp, Facebook, Apple, and Bing 24/7. She drafts a specific, owner-voice reply for each one. You approve in one tap — auto-posted on Google / Facebook / Apple / Bing; drafted with one-tap copy/paste for Yelp (their dashboard is manual-only). $29/mo ($19/mo Founding 100). Free audit of your current presence to start.