Generate Your Review Request
Build a thoughtful review request that helps Mission City Aquatics rank in Google's Ask Maps & Gemini AI feature. The scripts prompt naturally for the attributes Gemini matches against — service type, city served, and outcome — without coaching customers on what to say.
Tip: Google is best for local SEO and Gemini AI ranking. Facebook taps your existing customer network. Yelp matters because Apple Intelligence and ChatGPT both pull from it. Every script also includes a soft Nextdoor mention — HOA neighbors talk a lot about pool service.
Enter your client's phone or email below, then tap a button to open your phone or email app with the message ready to send. No infrastructure cost — uses your existing phone plan and email account.
Didn't open? Click for setup help
The script has already been copied to your clipboard — you can paste it into any app right now. If the email or messages app didn't open automatically, here's why:
On Chrome desktop: Chrome needs a default mail handler set.
- Open Gmail in a tab
- Look for a small protocol-handler icon on the right side of the address bar
- Click it and choose "Allow Gmail to open all email links"
Or paste chrome://settings/handlers in the address bar, enable "Sites can ask to handle protocols," then revisit Gmail and you'll get the prompt.
On iPhone / Android: This works automatically as long as you have a mail app (Mail, Gmail, Outlook) signed in. The "Open in Messages" button only works on mobile devices — on desktop, just paste from your clipboard.
Direct Review Links
Test these yourself or share directly. The Google link uses a branded search to strengthen branded search authority.
Why These Attributes Matter
Google's Gemini AI (Ask Maps) ranks businesses by matching review content to user searches. Generic reviews like "Mission City Aquatics was great!" get skipped. Reviews mentioning service type + city + outcome get surfaced first.
- ServiceService type matters. When someone asks Gemini "best green pool recovery in Stone Oak," it scans reviews for "green pool" and "Stone Oak." Reviews that don't say the exact service won't rank for that search.
- CityLocation keywords. Gemini matches reviews to local searches. A review that says "they took care of our pool in Terrell Hills every week" ranks for Terrell Hills searches — even though the company office is elsewhere.
- OutcomeResult language. "Crystal clear water," "weekly service," "fixed the pump," "balanced the chemistry" — these are the exact phrases pool owners and property managers search with. Reviews that include them win.
- TrustCertifications signal expertise. "CPO-certified," "health-code compliant," "insured" — for pool service especially, customers care about who's handling chemicals around their family or guests. These phrases convert lookers into bookers.
Stay Compliant — Avoid These Mistakes
Google's review policies are strict, and violations can get reviews removed or your Business Profile suspended. These rules apply to every review request you send.
- Never offer incentives for reviews — no service discounts, free treatments, gift cards, or freebies in exchange for a review.
- Never ask only happy clients while filtering out unhappy ones (this is "review gating" and is prohibited).
- Never write or edit a customer's review for them, or supply specific language to copy/paste.
- Never ask customers to mention employee names by request — this is a 2026 policy change.
- Never solicit reviews while the technician is still on-site — wait at least 24 hours after the appointment so the customer's response feels authentic, not pressured.
- Never post fake reviews or have employees, family, or friends post reviews on your behalf.