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STRATEGY · INTERMEDIATE · 7 MIN READ

Multi-Platform Review Strategy

Google vs Facebook vs Yelp vs industry-specific. How to weight your review asks by industry, customer demographic, and actual lead-generation impact. Allocation rules with real data.

⚡ TOO LONG, DIDN'T READ

For most local businesses: Google 70% / Facebook 20% / Yelp 10%. Exceptions: restaurants + salons raise Yelp's share, B2B + pro services lower Facebook's share, industries with big vertical platforms (Houzz, HomeAdvisor, Zillow) need a 4th allocation. Don't split evenly — weight by where your customers actually search.

Why You Need a Strategy (Not Just "Ask Everywhere")

Most businesses, when they finally get serious about reviews, make the same mistake: they send every customer to Google AND Facebook AND Yelp. This looks like "being thorough." It's actually:

  • Review fatigue — customers get 3 asks for the same service, stop responding to any
  • Platform friction — customer opens Google (no account), bails. Tries Facebook (no Facebook app installed), bails. Never gets to Yelp.
  • Diluted velocity — your 20 reviews/month split 3 ways = 6-7 per platform. Not enough on any to meaningfully move rankings.

The right strategy is concentrate first, diversify second. Win your primary platform, then add secondary. Here's how to decide.

The 3 Questions That Set Your Strategy

Before you allocate, answer these:

1
Where do YOUR customers currently find local businesses? (Not where you WANT them to — where they actually do.)
2
Which platforms show up on page 1 of Google when you search your business category + city?
3
What's your customer demographic? Age, tech-savviness, whether they use Facebook as a primary app.

Answer honestly. Most business owners guess wrong about where their customers find them — they assume Google when the reality is 60% Facebook (or vice versa). If you have a CRM with lead source tracking, pull the data. If not, survey your last 50 new customers: "How did you hear about us?"

The Default Weighting (Adjust From Here)

For a typical local service business in the US:

PlatformDefault allocationWhen to increaseWhen to decrease
Google70%Always — this is your local SEO engineAlmost never
Facebook20%Strong Facebook group / active page / older customersB2B services, urban professional services
Yelp10%Restaurant / salon / CA or NY metro / food-adjacentB2B, home services outside major metros
Industry-specific0-30%HomeAdvisor, Angi, Houzz, Zillow, Avvo for prosMost retail + service

Industry-Specific Weightings

The defaults flex heavily by industry. Here's a realistic breakdown:

IndustryGoogleFacebookYelpVertical
Restaurant / Bar50%15%30%5% (OpenTable, TripAdvisor)
Salon / Spa55%20%25%0%
Home services (HVAC, plumbing, electrical)75%15%5%5% (HomeAdvisor, Angi, Thumbtack)
Appliance repair80%15%5%0%
Home improvement / remodel60%10%5%25% (Houzz)
Real estate / LO50%15%5%30% (Zillow, Realtor.com, Google-indexed pro profiles)
Professional services (law, CPA)60%5%5%30% (Avvo, BBB, Google Scholar-adjacent)
Lawn care / pool / pest75%20%5%0%
House cleaning70%20%10%0%
Restoration (water/fire/mold)70%5%5%20% (insurance-network directories)
Auto repair80%10%10%0%

Adjust by Customer Demographic

Same industry, different customer base → different allocation. Examples:

  • Pediatric dental (parents 28-45) — shifts Facebook up: moms research pediatric providers in Facebook groups. Allocation: Google 60% / Facebook 35% / Yelp 5%.
  • Cosmetic dental (professionals 35-55) — shifts Google up: these customers Google extensively. Allocation: Google 75% / Facebook 10% / Yelp 15%.
  • Senior-focused home services — Facebook rises again: seniors are Facebook's most active demographic. Allocation: Google 60% / Facebook 30% / Yelp 10%.
  • Urban millennials (Brooklyn, Austin, SF) — Yelp rises: app-first culture. Allocation: Google 55% / Facebook 15% / Yelp 30%.

The "Concentrate First" Rule

Before you diversify, get your primary platform to a defensible position. Here's the threshold math:

Current review countStrategy
Under 25 Google reviewsSend 100% of asks to Google. You need volume to rank. Forget Facebook + Yelp.
25-100 Google reviews80% Google, 20% to secondary. Start building your second rail.
100-250 Google reviewsDefault weighting applies. Diversify for resilience.
250+ Google reviewsFull weighting + add vertical platforms if your industry has them.
⚠️ DON'T DIVERSIFY TOO EARLY

The #1 mistake: a business with 14 Google reviews sending 1/3 of its asks to Facebook + 1/3 to Yelp. Net result: 14 reviews split 3 ways = no meaningful presence on any platform. Concentrate until you've won one.

Vertical Platforms — When They Matter

Specialized review sites can outrank Google for specific industries. Know yours:

  • Home improvement: Houzz reviews often rank higher than Google for "remodel" searches. Essential for remodelers.
  • HVAC / plumbing / home services: Angi (formerly Angie's List), HomeAdvisor, Thumbtack. Some customers start their search there.
  • Real estate + LOs: Zillow Premier Agent reviews, Realtor.com profiles, BuysideRealty. LOs specifically need Zillow + Experience.com.
  • Law: Avvo, Super Lawyers, Martindale-Hubbell, state bar profiles. Avvo reviews often outrank Google for "[city] [practice area] lawyer."
  • CPA / accounting: BBB, Intuit ProAdvisor directory, state CPA society profiles.
  • Doctors / dentists: Healthgrades, Vitals, RealSelf (cosmetic), WebMD. Google My Business is the foundation; vertical platforms layer on.
  • Restaurants: OpenTable, Resy, Tripadvisor. Plus Google + Yelp at high weights.

How to Actually Allocate (In Practice)

Allocation happens at the review-ask-routing step. Options:

Method 1: Round-Robin

If your allocation is Google 70 / Facebook 20 / Yelp 10: every 10 customers, 7 get sent to Google, 2 to Facebook, 1 to Yelp. Simple, predictable, works.

Method 2: Customer-Signal-Based

Route based on customer behavior:

  • Customer email ends in @facebook accounts / they've engaged on your Facebook page → Facebook
  • Customer is on iPhone + has Yelp app detected in user-agent → Yelp
  • Everyone else → Google default

Smarter but requires CRM integration + user-agent parsing. Usually only worth it at 200+ reviews/month scale.

Method 3: Self-Selection

Send one SMS with 3 side-by-side QR codes / links: "Pick your favorite." The customer chooses. Works well for in-person / card handouts. Less control over allocation, but higher conversion because friction = zero.

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Measure What Actually Drives Business

Volume alone doesn't matter. Track which platform drives new leads. Methods:

  • Ask new customers the exact source: "How did you find us?" Track this religiously for 90 days.
  • Unique tracking phone numbers per platform in listings (CallRail, CallTrackingMetrics, ~$30/mo)
  • UTM parameters on website links — every platform gets a unique UTM (e.g., ?utm_source=google_reviews), then track which UTM drives conversions
  • Google Analytics referral data — imperfect but free signal

The output: rebalance your allocation quarterly based on which platform actually drives leads, not which has the most reviews.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I ever send the same customer to two platforms?

Yes — for 5-star customers who've engaged deeply (several referrals, multi-year, high LTV). Send one ask to Google initially. If they complete it, follow up 30 days later with a Facebook ask. Never send both asks the same week.

What about BBB / Better Business Bureau?

BBB is a throwback with limited influence in 2026 except for certain industries (moving, restoration, debt consolidation, contractors in some states). Don't prioritize it unless your industry does. Complaints to BBB still matter — monitor + respond, but don't drive reviews there.

Should I be on Nextdoor?

For hyperlocal service businesses (home services, pet care, personal training), yes — Nextdoor recommendations carry weight within a 1-2 mile radius. It's a different beast (community posts, not reviews), but worth engaging.

My industry has 12 vertical platforms — do I need to be on all of them?

No. Pick the 2-3 that actually show up on page 1 of Google for your category + city. The rest are noise. The rule: if a platform doesn't rank for your keyword in your metro, it doesn't matter — reviews there are invisible.

How often should I rebalance my allocation?

Quarterly. What works in Q1 may shift by Q3 as platforms change algorithms. Review your actual lead-source data + review-velocity-by-platform, adjust weights, keep going.

Summary: Your 5-Minute Allocation Framework

  1. Survey your last 50 customers: "How did you find us?"
  2. Google your category + city — note which platforms show on page 1
  3. Set default weighting: Google 70% / Facebook 20% / Yelp 10%
  4. Adjust for industry + demographic (use the tables above)
  5. If under 25 Google reviews — concentrate 100% there first
  6. Add vertical platforms if your industry has dominant ones
  7. Measure with unique phone numbers or UTMs
  8. Rebalance quarterly