Reviews

Good work asks for the review

The shop you trust in Aurora is the one your neighbors vouched for. This page shows the machinery a Growth-plan site uses to earn that — in the open, because there's nothing to hide.

  1. You close out the visit

    Marking the cut done in the calendar is the whole workflow — nothing extra to remember at the chair.

  2. The ask goes out that evening

    One text (or email, their choice at booking) with a direct link to the shop’s Google listing. One message, never a drip campaign.

  3. One tap to the review box

    The link opens Google’s own review form for the shop — no middleman page, no account hoops beyond Google’s.

  4. You answer from one place

    New reviews land in the monthly plain-English report, and replying to every one — five stars or two — stays a ten-minute habit.

The rules this engine won't break

  • Everyone gets the same ask. Filtering who gets asked — "review gating" — violates Google's policy, so this engine never pre-screens by satisfaction.
  • No fake reviews, no bought stars. That's why this demo page shows no rating: Strop & Steel isn't real, so there's nothing honest to show.
  • One ask, then quiet. A single message per visit, with a working opt-out. Customers are neighbors, not a list.

Where it all lands

The Google listing is what a customer actually sees at 10 PM. On the Growth plan it stays alive: fresh posts and photos every month, hours that match the door, and your reviews — real ones — accumulating underneath.

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