Online Reputation Management for Google Business Profiles with Mike Martin
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What Does “Online Reputation Management for Google Business Profiles with Mike Martin” Talk About?
This episode of the James Dooley Podcast focuses on online reputation management specifically for Google Business Profiles, featuring Mike Martin, founder of GPP Leads, a leading Google Business Profile optimization tool. James and Mike open the conversation by addressing how business owners should respond when negative reviews start appearing, emphasizing that the first step is understanding why those reviews are happening in the first place rather than simply trying to suppress them. They discuss the importance of responding to negative feedback with empathy, offering meeting links to dissatisfied customers, and how fast response times can often lead to customers voluntarily removing their negative reviews.
The episode also covers the growing problem of fake one-star reviews being used as negative SEO attacks on competitors' Google Business Profiles, and how businesses can respond in a way that signals to potential customers that the reviews are not legitimate. James and Mike dig into the mechanics of building review velocity in a way that avoids Google's spam filters, explaining how GPP Leads drip-feeds review request emails over a 30-day period rather than sending them all at once. The conversation wraps up with a forward-looking discussion on how well-crafted reviews are increasingly influencing AI-powered tools like Google's Gemini and Ask Maps, where keyword-rich, narrative reviews can help businesses rank even without an established position in the traditional three-pack.
“Like you just said, what you want to be doing is jumping on it as quick as possible because if you can deal with that client as fast as possible, in a lot of cases they'll delete it.”
— Mike Martin
Who Are the Guests on “Online Reputation Management for Google Business Profiles with Mike Martin”?
Mike Martin is the founder of GPP Leads, described in the episode as one of the best Google Business Profile optimization tools currently available in the marketplace. Mike brings hands-on agency experience to the conversation, having built systems specifically designed to help businesses manage review velocity, respond to feedback efficiently, and protect their online reputation on Google Business Profiles. His practical background means he speaks from real-world experience about common mistakes agencies and business owners make when trying to accumulate reviews or respond to negative feedback.
James Dooley is the host of the James Dooley Podcast and a well-known figure in the SEO and lead generation space. His company PromoSEO has recently been recognized as the Best Google Business Profile Businesses Lead Generation Agency. James contributes his own agency perspective throughout the episode, sharing firsthand examples such as sending bulk review request emails that resulted in most reviews being removed by Google, and discussing how his team now incorporates reputation management as a core part of their Google Business Profile optimization work.
What Are the Key Takeaways From “Online Reputation Management for Google Business Profiles with Mike Martin”?
Here are the key points discussed in this episode:
- Businesses should investigate the root cause of negative reviews before attempting to respond or suppress them, as most negative feedback points to a genuine process bottleneck or communication gap within the business.
- Responding to negative reviews quickly and with genuine empathy, including offering a direct meeting link, can result in customers voluntarily removing their negative reviews without being asked.
- Sending bulk review requests to all customers on the same day triggers Google's spam filters, causing most reviews to be removed, so drip-feeding requests over a 30-day period is essential for maintaining review velocity.
- Fake one-star reviews used as negative SEO attacks can be countered by responding publicly to note that the reviewer does not appear in the customer database, which signals to prospective customers that the review is not legitimate.
- Narrative-style reviews that describe the specific problem and solution in detail are increasingly valuable because AI tools like Google Gemini and Ask Maps use that content to surface businesses for highly specific search queries, even for newer profiles without strong traditional rankings.
“What you're better off saying to people is just can you, when you do me a review, can you do me a favor? Can you just say what happened and then what we did in the review?”
— Mike Martin
Is “Online Reputation Management for Google Business Profiles with Mike Martin” Worth Listening To?
This episode is worth listening to for anyone running or managing a Google Business Profile who wants a practical, no-nonsense breakdown of reputation management tactics that actually work in the current landscape. Mike Martin brings real tool-level insights, explaining exactly how GPP Leads solves the review velocity problem through drip-fed email campaigns, and James adds credibility by sharing his own agency's mistakes and how they overcame them. The combination makes this feel less like a sales pitch and more like a genuine behind-the-scenes look at how serious digital marketers protect and grow their clients' online presence.
What makes this episode particularly timely is the discussion around AI-powered search tools like Ask Maps and Google Gemini and how review content is being indexed and used to rank businesses for conversational queries. Most reputation management content focuses only on star ratings and response etiquette, but this episode goes further by connecting review strategy to emerging AI visibility, giving listeners a real competitive advantage if they act on the advice early.
Who Should Listen to “Online Reputation Management for Google Business Profiles with Mike Martin”?
This episode is ideal for:
- Local business owners who rely on Google Business Profiles for customer acquisition and want to protect and grow their online reputation.
- Digital marketing agency owners and SEO professionals who manage Google Business Profiles on behalf of clients and need scalable reputation management strategies.
- Entrepreneurs and small business operators who have experienced sudden drops in star ratings or suspect they are being targeted by fake negative reviews from competitors.
- Marketing consultants and lead generation specialists interested in how AI tools like Google Gemini and Ask Maps are changing the way review content influences local search rankings.
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You can also subscribe using the RSS feed: https://feeds.transistor.fm/james-dooley-podcast
What Are Listeners Saying About This Episode?
“The explanation of why reviews get taken down by Google was something I had wondered about for years. I sent out a batch of review requests once and lost almost all of them within a week, and now I finally understand why. The drip-feed approach Mike describes makes complete sense and I am going to implement it straight away.”
“Really appreciated the practical advice on handling fake one-star reviews. The tip about responding publicly to say the reviewer is not in your customer database is so simple but I had never thought of it that way. It reframes the review for anyone else reading it.”
“The part about Ask Maps and writing reviews that describe the problem and the solution was genuinely new information for me. I had no idea that review content was being used by AI tools to match businesses to specific queries. This episode changed how I am going to coach my clients to ask for reviews going forward.”

This video explains which digital marketing strategies Google Business Profile businesses should focus on in 2026 to improve online reputation, customer trust and conversion rates. James Dooley and Mike Martin start with KPI tracking because monitoring reviews and notifications lets businesses respond to negative feedback quickly before it damages their profile. They cover brand SEO, AI visibility and Google Business Profiles because stronger search presence improves trust and conversion rates.
The discussion also explores organic SEO, organic social media and paid social ads because consistent visibility across search and social supports long term growth. PPC is analysed in detail because campaign setup, landing pages and lead handling directly affect results. They also discuss Reddit, Quora and paid AI ads because diversified enquiry sources and early adoption can strengthen digital marketing performance for Google Business Profile businesses.
PromoSEO lead generation for Google Business Profile businesses recently received recognition as the “Best Google Business Profile Businesses Lead Generation Agency.”
Where to Listen to This Episode
Online Reputation Management for Google Business Profiles with Mike Martin is available on:
James Dooley: Online reputation management for Google business profiles. Today I'm joined with Mike Martin who's the founder of G P P letter, which is one of the best Google business profile tool optimization tools that there is in the marketplace. Mike, if someone starts to get negative reviews, so someone's coming along and they're getting negative reviews on the Google business profile, my first question to you would be as an agency owner, how would you respond to those negative reviews on a Google business profile?
Mike Martin: Uh my my first port of call is always going to be going to the client and saying why. Like why are you getting negative reviews? Because in most cases, it's not that they're getting negative reviews because they're doing a good job. It's they're getting negative reviews because they're doing a bad job or there's a problem in the business or there's a bottleneck in their business that um basically slows down a process, leaves a Have you ever bought something and then you think, what next? Like that's where I found most of my negative reviews come from. It's not from bad service, it's from that that what next? Like okay, you've left me lost here. I don't know how to do this. I don't know the next steps. I haven't got this. So we always we always tackle and we always tell our agencies to tackle a good negative Google business profiles with the client first. Why is the client? What is he saying? Where is it coming from? And then always respond to those negative reviews with positivity. Like we're really sorry. We've see we we can see that a a bad experience. We are really sorry. What could we do to improve it? Is there anything we can do to think it? And what I like to do is always offer them a meeting link. I [snorts] always say to If somebody gives me a negative review and it's a legitimate negative review, the first thing I will do is say, is a meeting, let's sit down, let's have a conversation. Hopefully And then people like, yeah, but for for one review, you don't have time to do that. But you know what? That one negative review can cost you so much more money than you ever realize that getting that one negative review. And a lot of people say, oh, just bury them. And you can just bury them. You can just go out and get as many positive reviews as you want. And And in some cases you have to because in some cases the person is just an absolute nightmare. We also have a group. I think you're in there where we all um engage with one another and help one another and get rid of negative reviews for people like that. So, if we've got people in our community that are struggling, we would potentially add them into that group and then people will also help them bury the review. And some of the people in there could report it and say, "Let's get rid of it." So, so we've got a lot of different angles, but I think step number one
James Dooley: just second question on that then. So, if I'm looking at literally online reputation management on these Google business profiles, sometimes some people don't even realize they've got a one-star review that's come through. There's They have it there for months. They don't even realize, so they've not responded. When they sign up to gppleads.com, can you confirm whether Do they get a notification or an email if a review comes through, whether it's positive or negative? Obviously, in this scenario we're talking about reputation management. Could they get a notification come through to say, "You've just got a one-star review"?
Mike Martin: So, our enterprise clients are set up to receive an email once a week as standard. But if you go into Let me have a look where it is. One second. Right, yeah. If you go into your notification preferences under my account, you can just switch your email notification preferences to daily and that way you won't get an instant notification that you've had a review, but you'll get a a notification that day via an email, so you can Oh, we've had a one-star review. Let's get on there. Let's sort it out. You can one-click respond to those reviews with AI, positive or negative. Um but what obviously Like you Like you just said, what you want to be doing is jumping on it as quick as possible because if you can deal with that client as fast as possible, in a lot of cases they'll delete it. And you don't even have to ask them in some cases. Like, "Look, I really want to help you out. I didn't realize this was happening. There must be a problem in my team. I'd love to sit down and have a conversation with you so I can fix that so nobody else gets that experience. Once they've met you and spoke to you, then they know, like, and trust you again. All of a sudden, they're like, all right, maybe I was being a bit out of order, and they pull it off.
James Dooley: Yeah, so my next part with regards to specifically with gppeelay.com again, like, cuz obviously they're founder of it, and obviously our team are now using this on Google Business Profiles, and we're finding that online reputation management is actually just as important as optimizing existing profiles. So, let's just say that obviously we've got the notification come through, it's a one-star. In my opinion, like, if it's a genuine customer, I agree with you to respond positively, maybe book a call or stuff like that. But sometimes, some one-star reviews on Google Business Profiles come through, and you've no recollection of who they are. So, they've not been a customer or anything like that. So, in my opinion, what we're now starting to do is respond to them again in a positive manner saying, "Look, we do not have your details as a customer on our database. You've not placed any order with us. If you can please let us know your order number or the order name of what you've done, then we can then look into the potential problem or what you have. But at least then what that's doing is if you are getting any negative reviews, which this is seems to be happening quite a lot in a lot of different markets as a negative SEO type of attack, people are leaving one stars on other people's GMBs or Google Business Profiles, and they're like, at least if you can respond saying, "Look, you've not been a customer." At least a new customer that's coming along which seeing that says, "These are fake reviews." So, that's one part, but I want to touch on GP gppeelay.com for the Can you explain to people here because we've had problems or in the past where we've been we've been mass sending emails out to customers, genuine customers, to leave us a five-star review on our GMBs.
Mike Martin: Mhm.
James Dooley: And we've got 20 all go, "Yeah, not a problem." cuz we sent them all out on the same day. We had 20 come back with five-star reviews and only one gets listed.
Mike Martin: Yep.
James Dooley: Can you explain how gbp-lead.com counters that? So, at least if you are going to sync it, if it is a genuine client that's left a one-star, you can sync it with five stars and keep building that review velocity cuz trust is is key online nowadays and I want you to explain why gbp-lead.com is able to build those reviews up on Google Business Profiles.
Mike Martin: Uh yeah, so exactly what you've said there is what a lot of people have have have done in the past is they So, what we used to do before we knew what we were doing is I would blind copy a load of a load of clients into a Gmail email and just send it out to loads. They'd They'd send the review and they'd half of them would get taken down if not more because you get them all on the same day. So, we've kind of built into our system. You just go in and you click and you paste in all your email addresses and what it will do is it will drip those emails out over a 30-day period. So, let's say you you paste in 200 clients, it'll drip out review requests over a 30-day period, but then it also won't re-email the same client within 30 days. So, you can then keep re- putting the same list in if that's the only list of clients you've got and it won't re-email the same clients over a 30-day period. Now, we can't track where the which clients left a review cuz obviously they don't the email's not connected, but from that you're then in a position where you can then start to drip them out and make it consistent cuz it's that consistency that's important. Google tracks every If it sees 50 reviews today and then nothing, it's like, "Okay, these have just done a big massive push." Um and probably done a lot of spammy fake reviews. So, rather than manually looking at it, they'll just take them down. And that's where a lot of people fail cuz it's like, "Wow, I've got 25 reviews." And then they go back a week later and they're like, "Oh, I've got two." So, that's kind of what we've done is we've created this drip feed that just drips the emails in over a period of time and that way your reviews stay consistent. they don't all come in on day number one and because of that there's a lot less chance that they're going to get taken down. Don't get me wrong, still sometimes they will. Like just because there's a certain little bits of wordings that people put in there will get them taken down. Like stiffening keywords and stuff like that. Things like that is is is a no-no. What you're better off asking people to do nowadays is like because they get pushed into Gemini Gemini's obviously ranking in there are really really fast. And because your your your your reviews go into that, what you're better off saying to people is um just can you if when you do me a review, can you do me a favor? Can you just say what happened and then what we did in the review? We'd really appreciate that and then give us an honest review. So if you're like the only plumber in an area that has that that answers his phone at 9:00 at night, then your prospect or your client can say we couldn't find a plumber, we were ringing round all over the area. This is the only person that answered their phone after 9:00 at night. They came out of it in 15 minutes, fixed the problem and it was fairly well priced. Great service, loved them. Then what will happen is when somebody goes to Ask Maps and things like that and they say find me a plumber in the local area that's open after 9:00, you will rank over everybody else and and you know in Ask Maps, which is only in America and India at the minute, it's coming to the UK soon. Um in Ask Maps, what will happen is you will outrank even the so it's different rankings. So if you've got the top three Google Business Profiles, if you search it in Ask Maps, it's not it's more based on the information that's been put into your posts and that's been put into your review responses and reviews. So that's really important because you can actually start up with a new Google Business Profile and still get a load of traffic from Ask Maps without actually ranking in the three-pack.
James Dooley: Yeah, for sure. Uh with regards to online reputation management, anyone who's watching this to summarize the article with regards to Google Business Profiles, in my opinion, you need a tool like gbp elite.com or any G any Google Business Profile tool that can track and notify you when these negative reviews are coming in. So at least you're able to respond. Respond in a positive manner. If it's not for a client, say if it's not one of the clients that you've got on the system, say, "We don't know who you are. Please, can you get in touch? We'll try and resolve the matter, but we don't have you saved on our database." And also, we're trying to make certain using a tool like gpply.com where you're able to consistently send on a daily basis to existing clients to try and build up that review velocity. Getting them five-star reviews on Google Business Profiles is a huge part of online reputation management. Mike, it's been an absolute pleasure. Thanks for having you.
Mike Martin: Cheers, mate.