You wake up, check your phone, and there it is. One star. A paragraph that feels unfair. Maybe even a few details that aren’t accurate.
Your first reaction is probably anger. Or embarrassment. Or the strong urge to fire off a response that sets the record straight.
Pause.
A bad review feels personal. But how you handle it is marketing. Future clients will read that review—and your response—long before they call you. This isn’t just about damage control. It’s about how you show up under pressure.
Here’s how to deal with it the right way.
Step 1: Don’t Respond Right Away
When a negative review hits, your instincts aren’t your best guide. Give it a few hours. Maybe a day.
Re-read the review calmly. Ask yourself:
- Is there any truth here?
- Is this actually a former client?
- Is it possible there was a breakdown in communication?
Not every bad review is malicious. Sometimes it’s frustration. Sometimes it’s unmet expectations. Sometimes it’s a misunderstanding.
You can’t control what someone posts. But you can control whether your reply makes you look steady or reactive.
Step 2: Check If It Violates Platform Rules
If the review is fake, defamatory, or from someone who was never a client, check the platform’s guidelines. Google, Yelp, and Facebook all allow you to flag reviews that violate their policies.
That said, don’t count on it being removed quickly—or at all. Even if you report it, you still need a public response. Silence can look like guilt.
Step 3: Keep Your Response Short and Professional
This is the part most lawyers get wrong. They write long replies defending every detail. They argue facts. They hint at confidential information to prove they’re right.
Don’t do that.
Your response isn’t for the reviewer. It’s for future clients who are reading the exchange.
Here’s a basic structure that works:
- Acknowledge the concern
- Express willingness to talk offline
- Keep it calm and neutral
For example:
“We’re sorry to hear you felt this way. We aim to provide clear communication and strong representation to every client. We’d welcome the opportunity to speak with you directly and address your concerns.”
That’s it. No sarcasm. No defensive tone. No legal threats.
Step 4: Never Reveal Confidential Information
Even if the reviewer is wrong, you can’t publicly explain why. Attorney-client confidentiality doesn’t disappear because someone left a one-star review.
Resist the urge to say, “We told you this in your consultation,” or “You declined our advice.” That may feel satisfying in the moment, but it looks unprofessional to everyone else.
Take the high road. Always.
Step 5: Zoom Out and Look at the Bigger Picture
One bad review won’t ruin your reputation—unless it’s the only one you have.
If you have 25 positive reviews and one negative one, most readers will shrug it off. In fact, a mix of reviews can make your profile look more real. A perfect 5.0 with 200 reviews sometimes looks suspicious.
If you only have a handful of reviews, this is your cue to start asking for more. The best way to handle a bad review is to dilute it with good ones.
Step 6: Improve What You Can
Sometimes bad reviews point to patterns. If multiple people mention slow response times or unclear billing, that’s worth looking at.
You don’t need to agree with every complaint. But if there’s a recurring theme, it may be time to tighten up your processes.
Marketing isn’t just about getting leads. It’s about delivering an experience worth talking about.
Step 7: Don’t Obsess Over It
After you’ve responded professionally and evaluated any lessons, move on.
Don’t keep checking the review every hour. Don’t let it derail your week. And don’t assume it’s costing you clients.
Most people understand that no business pleases everyone. What they care about is how you handle criticism. Calm, measured responses build more trust than perfection ever will.
A bad review feels personal, but it’s also an opportunity. It’s a public moment that shows how you operate when things don’t go your way. That matters more than a star rating.









