Review Gating
Screening customers so only happy ones get routed to public review sites — a practice that violates Google's policy.
Definition
Review gating is the practice of asking customers how they feel first, then steering only the satisfied ones to leave a public review while diverting unhappy ones to a private channel. Google and other platforms prohibit it.
In depth
Review gating works by putting a filter in front of your public profile. A customer gets a survey or a 'how did we do?' prompt, and based on the answer they're either sent off to post a glowing review or quietly routed to a private feedback form where the complaint never goes public. The result is an artificially inflated star rating that hides anything negative.
For a residential contractor it's tempting — your rating is what homeowners judge you by, so why not show only the good? But Google explicitly bans the practice, and a gated profile can be penalized or have Google reviews stripped. Worse, homeowners are good at smelling a profile that's suspiciously spotless; a wall of nothing but five stars can read as fake and erode the very trust you were trying to build.
The fix isn't to filter — it's honest reputation management: ask everyone, then handle the results well. We invite every customer to review, respond professionally to the occasional low score, and let an honest mix of mostly-strong reviews do the convincing. A few four-star reviews and a gracious reply to a tough one make the whole profile believable in a way a gated one never will.
Worked example
Instead of texting only thrilled clients a Google link while sending unhappy ones a private form, a contractor invites all clients to review and earns a real 4.7 that homeowners actually trust.
Reviews & Social Proof
Want this run for you, not just read about?
Turn happy customers into the proof that wins the next one — more reviews, stronger testimonials, and a reputation that sells while you sleep.