What happened after I changed my marketing to use the exact words from customer reviews?
I recently shared on this post about using customer reviews to improve your marketing: Are you using your customer reviews to improve your marketing? | Home Service Community - 12894 Since then, I’ve been paying even closer attention to the exact words customers use when they describe why they hired us, why they trust us, and why they keep paying for the service. That has changed how I write ads, follow-ups, website copy, and even how we talk to prospects. For us, the reviews kept repeating the same things: “worth every penny” “like clockwork” “one less thing to worry about” “they text before they come” “they send a picture of the closed gate” “they take the waste with them” “I was embarrassed by how bad the yard was” “our last company left the gate open” “there aren’t enough hours in the day” Those phrases matter because they came from real customers. So instead of trying to invent clever marketing language, I started using the language customers were already using to explain the value. And I’ve noticed a difference. Prospects seem to trust us faster. They already feel understood before we even get deep into the sales conversation. When someone sees an ad or follow-up that speaks directly to the thing they’re worried about, the conversation changes. For example, if someone is worried about their dog getting out, talking about gate photos immediately matters. If someone is embarrassed about a winter backlog, telling them we handle those all the time and they’re not the worst yard we’ve seen matters. If someone is comparing price, showing that other customers call us “worth every penny” matters. If someone is busy and overwhelmed, “one less thing to worry about” hits harder than a generic service description. This has helped us close a higher percentage of people because the marketing is doing more of the trust-building before the call or quote. The prospect shows up with a higher willingness to buy because they already see themselves in the message. That’s been one of the biggest lessons for me. Your reviews are not just social proof. They are market research. They tell you: who your best customers are what they were dealing with before they hired you what they value most what they were afraid of what language makes the service feel worth it what separates you from cheaper competitors If you’re only using reviews as a 5-star badge on your website, you’re probably missing the best part. Read them for patterns. Pull the exact phrases. Use those phrases in your ads, emails, quotes, sales scripts, and follow-ups. The best marketing language is often already sitting inside your customer reviews. Have you changed your messaging based on the exact words your customers use?26Views3likes2CommentsAre you using your customer reviews to improve your marketing?
I recently had Claude scrape and organize all of our Google and Facebook reviews, then I put the findings into ACQ AI to see what needed to change in our business context, avatar, offer, and marketing. It was honestly one of the more useful marketing exercises I’ve done. Because the reviews showed what customers actually care about. For us, the strongest themes were: communication reliability thoroughness gate safety haul-away professionalism being kind to customers and their dogs Some of that I already knew. But seeing it repeated across hundreds of reviews made it a lot harder to ignore. For example, customers mention our text communication constantly. They like knowing when we’re coming. They like the 30-minute heads up. They like the “all done” message. They like getting a picture of the closed gate. That tells me communication is a major part of the service experience. Customers also bring up gate safety a lot. That matters because many of them have either had a dog get out before or they’re afraid it could happen. So if I’m writing ads, emails, or website copy, I probably need to talk about safety and gate photos more often. Another big one was haul-away. We take the waste with us instead of leaving it in the customer’s trash can. I’ve always seen that as part of our service, but the reviews showed customers notice it and care about it. That becomes a marketing point. The review analysis also confirmed something important about price. We are on the higher end in our market. Customers still say things like: worth every penny more than fair I’d pay twice as much That tells me our marketing should not be built around being cheap. It should explain why the service is worth more: better communication safer access cleaner yards less smell less stress more trust I think more home service businesses should do this. Your reviews can show you: Why people hired you in the first place Were they overwhelmed? Burned by another company? Too busy? Embarrassed? Dealing with a life event? Why they stayed Was it communication? Quality? Reliability? The technician? The process? What they say when price is no longer the main issue Those exact phrases should influence your ads, website, emails, and sales scripts. What your unique selling proposition actually is Sometimes the thing customers love most is different than the thing you keep promoting. Where your systems are creating trust or friction One bad review about repeated follow-up texts told us something important too. Automation has to respect opt-outs and avoid making people feel chased. The biggest takeaway for me: Your best marketing language is probably already sitting inside your reviews. You just have to organize it, look for patterns, and let the customer tell you why they chose you. Have you ever gone through your reviews and changed your marketing based on what customers were already saying?66Views8likes11Comments