Responding to complaints and criticisms is a very definite learned skill in online hotel marketing – we show you how.
In the past, a customer’s bad experience may go as far as several friends. Now, a negative hotel review can be viewed by almost the entire world literally in only a matter of seconds.
Determine when not to respond: Sometimes the best online hotel marketing strategy for dealing with negative reviews is to simply ignore them. If you can answer yes to any of the following questions, it may be smarter not to respond to the review at all:
1. Are other users of the website already disagreeing with the initial review?
2. Has the user left many negative reviews on the site – are they a ‘born complainer’?
3. Is this the only negative review out of dozens of positive ones?
If you have answered yes to more than two of these questions, it may be best not to respond to the review. When there is a ‘troll’ on a blog who is posting inflammatory comments, it is sometimes best not to fan the flames and let the fire burn out quickly.
Deciding to respond: You or your online hotel marketing team must assess each case individually and decide whether to respond and what action to take. If you don’t respond, you not only run the risk of the review ‘growing legs’ and spreading across the internet, but you miss an opportunity to retain a customer and to possibly right a genuine wrong.
Good responses outweigh bad experiences: In most cases, you can actually improve your reputation online by handling a negative review well. It isn’t only the customer in question that will notice, either; potential and past customers will often respond better to a hotel that is consistent, mature and proactive in its handling of bad reviews through internet hotel marketing.
Respond in a calm manner: There are two things you need to do before you start typing anything in your response box. First, try to determine the facts of the situation. Secondly, make sure you’ve calmed down and are seeing both sides of the situation before you start your response. Don’t write anything that sounds angry, sarcastic or negative, even if it is ‘veiled’.
Apologise for the way the customer is feeling: If it isn’t appropriate, you don’t need to apologise for the situation that occurred or your staff’s action. However, saying something like “I’m sorry that you felt so unsatisfied with your experience” in no way admits guilt, but does help to start on a conciliatory note and help appease the hotel customer.
Correct the facts if appropriate: If a customer’s bad hotel review is based on incorrect facts, correct them politely. Check with the owner of the review website also – if a review is libellous or false you may be able to have it taken down. Even if the facts are false, don’t threaten either the reviewer or the review site – you’ll only damage your hotel’s reputation.
For full article see Hotel Internet Marketing


3 responses so far ↓
1 Helen Cousins // Jun 25, 2010 at 1:16 am
Thank you for a good post about handling negative reviews. A few other points to consider:
A brief response to positive reviews can be a nice touch – good etiquette.
Don’t use ’stock’ answers – it looks too ‘corporate’ & uncaring.
A few bad reviews never hurt anyone – in fact they add credibility to the good reviews – especially if you have excellent reviews and lots of them!
Responding to reviews may boost search rankings within a site. This would depend on the search algorithms. Flipkey (a subsidiary of Trip Advisor for the self catering sector) definitely reward owner/managers who respond to reviews by boosting their rankings.
Good reviews boost bookings.
My strategy? Respond, engage & boost bookings!
2 Thomas Stone // Jul 15, 2010 at 8:49 pm
Very cool article! I have stayed in vacation rentals before, and luckily have never had to leave a bad review for any property owner, but I think these tips are a really good way to handle guests (afterall, we just want to have the BEST time on vacation!). I only look for vacation homes on websites that I trust (never free classifieds!), and there is one site that will definitely try because I have hearing a lot of good things about them Metroflats.com looks to be a really interesting site where the vacationer can actually become a host! I plan to listing my property with them very soon!
3 @hhotelconsult // Jul 20, 2010 at 12:50 am
Great piece. Owners need to understand this so much better than they do, right now. Here’s something I wrote last year about which reviews to respond to:
http://www.hrabaconsulting.com/blog/2009/03/30/so-which-tripadvisor-reviews-should-you-respond-to/
Frankly, I think all of them. You can’t ignore negatives, because you look defensive. Usually the negative reviews are more useful than the positive ones… listen, learn grow. The positive simply allow you to celebrate something they are talking about.. a pastry chef, a wine festival, etc.
Tripadvisor’s ranking are *not* effected by management responses. That’s straight from the company. But responding to reviews has gotten me so much solid ROI it’s ridiculous. It engages people, puts a human tone and face to the hotel… often prompting more useful and constructive reviewing ini the long run.
People aren’t rude and ridiculous when they know someone is on the other end reading and interacting.
My two cents.. hope it’s enough! THANK YOU FOR THE POST… it’s great.
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