Alright, so we'll keep it to 1-2 a week till we get established. Thanks!
- Ruben
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Alright, so we'll keep it to 1-2 a week till we get established. Thanks!
Is there any sort of guideline on this? Right now, we have very few google reviews. However, I've cross referenced a list of our happiest clients with people who have g+ accounts. There are at least 12 clients, I feel strongly would write us g+ reviews if I asked them to. I want to just get the word out today, but I'm worried if 8-12 reviews in a week would red flag us.
I've heard that getting too many reviews to quickly can be a problem, but I'm thinking that more like 100 than 10, but I have no idea. Most of my competitors don't have any reviews, and the most any of them have is 10. I don't know if that matters at all either in terms of triggering a red flag.
I'd appreciate whatever insight you all could give.
Thanks,
Ruben
With the exception of good e-commerce sites, I find search bars outdated and rather unreliable. Even if it is a good search bar, people are so used to just googling for info, rather than using a website's search bar. For example, I just did a quick "experiment" with Zappos (who probably has a top level search bar) and I typed in their search bar "red shoes," then I googled "Zappos red shoes" and I got the same page.
If you have a bad search bar, (and users use it) they will get mad. If you have a good search bar (like Zappos), it's still not any better than google. Unless you have a bunch of pages that you want your users to read, but you don't want google to index (pretty odd scenario) i see no point in having a search bar these days.
Enjoy your weekend!
Ruben