Build a thoughtful review request that helps OCI Restoration rank in Google's Ask Maps & Gemini AI feature. The scripts prompt naturally for the attributes Gemini matches against — damage type, city served, and outcome — without coaching customers on what to say.
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 — after a disaster, neighborhood recommendations are gold for restoration referrals.
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 — it uses your existing phone plan and email account.
mailto: opens your default mail program (Outlook, Apple Mail, or Gmail if configured).
Test these yourself or share them directly. The Google link uses a branded search to strengthen OCI's branded search authority — reinforcing the brand in Google's index every time it's clicked.
Every generated script closes with a soft mention of Nextdoor. For restoration especially, this matters — after a flood or fire, neighbors talk, and a single "we used OCI and they were incredible" post in a neighborhood feed drives a steady trickle of local leads that never show up in a Google search.
Google's Gemini AI (Ask Maps) ranks businesses by matching review content to what people search for. Generic reviews like "OCI was great!" get skipped. Reviews mentioning damage type + city + outcome get surfaced first.
Damage type matters. When someone asks Gemini "best water damage company in Cary," it scans reviews for "water damage" and "Cary." A review that doesn't name the exact service won't rank for that search.
Location keywords. Gemini matches reviews to local searches. A review that says "they handled the mold in our Durham home" ranks for Durham searches — even though your office is in Raleigh.
Result language. "Dried it out fast," "handled the whole insurance claim," "rebuilt it better than before" — these are the exact phrases homeowners search with. Reviews that include them win.
Trust signals. "Veteran-owned," "showed up within the hour," "IICRC certified," "walked us through every step" — for restoration, a customer in crisis cares about speed, honesty, and who they let into a damaged home. These phrases turn searchers into callers.
The scripts never tell customers what to say. They ask the right questions ("What did we help with?", "What city are you in?") so the customer's natural answer includes those keywords on its own. That's the difference between a review that ranks in Gemini and one that disappears.
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.
Google now explicitly prohibits asking customers to mention specific employee names in reviews. These scripts comply — they prompt for damage type, city, and outcome only.