Why Your Text Reviews Are Not Converting Visitors Into Clients (And What To Do About It)
Most service businesses are collecting reviews the wrong way.
Not because the reviews are bad. Not because the clients are not happy. But because text just does not do what a real person on camera does. And if you have spent any time wondering why people are landing on your website and not getting in touch, this is often where the problem starts.
The website problem nobody talks about
Think about what a typical service business website looks like. A list of services. A page that says something like “what our clients say” with a handful of quotes in a nice italic font. Maybe a five star rating somewhere. Maybe a logo wall.
And then you wait.
The issue is that none of that creates a genuine connection. People scroll past text reviews in about half a second. They register a general vibe and move on. And because almost every business now has a five star Google rating, those ratings have stopped communicating what they were supposed to. When everyone has the same score, the score stops meaning anything.
What is actually missing from most websites is the equivalent of someone leaning over and saying “I have worked with these people, here is what it was actually like.” That is the thing that tips someone from browsing to enquiring.
What a video testimonial actually does
A two minute video of your best client talking about what it was like to work with you does something text cannot do. It creates an emotional connection. You can hear the tone of voice. You can see the person. You understand whether this is someone like you, talking about a situation like yours.
It also does not require you to be present. It works on your website while you sleep. It works in a proposal when you are not in the room. It works on LinkedIn when someone is scrolling through and does not even know they were looking for you yet.
The businesses that are winning right now are the ones leaning into this. Not the biggest businesses with the biggest budgets. Often the smaller, local businesses that had the nerve to ask a happy client to sit in front of a camera for ten minutes.
Why text testimonials fall short
Here is the other problem with text reviews specifically. No matter how genuine they are, no matter how carefully you have kept the exact words the client used, it always looks like you wrote them. Because you posted them. Because they live on your website. The reader knows that.
A video removes that entirely. The client is right there. Speaking in their own voice. Saying things you would never say about yourself.
There is also something worth noting about the five star review situation. Everyone has them now. People go on Google, they see five stars, they see five stars, they see five stars. The rating becomes background noise. What actually makes someone stop is a real person with a real story.
How to structure the shoot
You do not need a big production budget for this. You do not need to hire a crew. What you need is a happy client, a decent camera, and three questions.
The three questions that work every time are:
What was the situation before we started working together? What was the experience like? What changed?
That is it. No script. Give the client the questions in advance so they can think about it, but do not hand them bullet points to read from. The goal is a genuine conversation, not a rehearsed speech. The less polished it sounds the more people trust it.
A couple of practical notes. Some clients get nervous on camera. Do a few takes. Have a proper conversation with them first to warm them up. Get them comfortable before you start rolling. If you want to make an event of it, bring in a few clients at once, have a bit of a celebration, and set up a room where people can come and go. You end up with content and a genuine energy that shows on camera.
Where the footage goes
Once you have it, use it everywhere. On the relevant service page on your website. On LinkedIn. In proposals, where you can send a link to a specific video that matches what the prospect is considering. You do not need it to live publicly if that works better. A private link sent to one person in a proposal is still doing the job.
The businesses that use this well are the ones who think of it as a sales asset rather than just a marketing nice-to-have. It is not a box-ticking exercise. It is the equivalent of having your best client in the room every time someone looks you up.
What to do next
If you have got a happy client and you have not filmed them yet, that is probably the first thing worth fixing. It does not have to be perfect. It has to be genuine.
If you want some help with that, the Customer Story Video is one of the core things we do at Thumbmuffin. You can find out more here: https://thumbmuffin.ca/video-production-calgary-best/
Stop writing hooks that get scrolled past. Get the free hook writing cheat sheet here: https://thumbmuffin.ca/hook-cheat-sheet/
Increase Your Sales and Revenue Today! https://www.thumbmuffin.ca/contact-us/

