A straight answer — no agency trying to sell you a retainer, no software company overselling features. Just what you actually get at every price point and how to decide what's right for you.
If you've been googling "reputation management" lately, you've probably landed on two types of results: agency websites telling you that you absolutely need to hire them, and software companies telling you that their $299/month platform is the answer. Neither of those sources has any incentive to give you a straight answer.
So here's one. Reputation management exists on a spectrum. At one end, you're doing it yourself for free. At the other, you're paying an agency $1,500/month to manage everything on your behalf. Most businesses belong somewhere in the middle — and figuring out where is mostly a question of how much of your time the problem is worth, and what specifically you're trying to solve.
The right answer isn't "hire an agency" or "buy software." It's understanding what each option actually does — and being honest about what your business actually needs right now.
The term covers several different things that get bundled together and sold as one service. Before you decide what to pay for, it helps to know what the parts are.
Review monitoring — knowing when new reviews come in, across which platforms, and what they say. This is the foundation everything else builds on.
Review solicitation and routing — proactively asking customers for reviews after a visit, and filtering negative sentiment to a private channel before it goes public. This is what most agencies lead with and what tools like Podium and Birdeye are primarily built around.
Review responses — replying to reviews, positive and negative, in a way that's professional and on-brand. Some businesses handle this themselves. Agencies often do it on their behalf.
Pattern analysis and insight — understanding what your reviews are collectively saying. Not just how many and what rating, but what themes keep coming up, which ones are growing, and what they mean for how you're running your business. This is the part most tools skip entirely.
An agency offering full reputation management typically does all four. Software tools generally focus on one or two. And most businesses, if they're honest, only urgently need one or two right now.
Here's the honest breakdown of what full reputation management actually delivers — and which part of it you genuinely need an agency for versus what you can do yourself with the right tool.
The 20% is real. If you genuinely don't have time to read insights and act on them, or if you want someone else writing responses, an agency earns its fee. But for most growing businesses, the 80% — the intelligence layer — is the part that actually changes how well you're running your business. And most agencies don't deliver the 80% particularly well because their tools are built around monitoring and response, not pattern analysis.
Paying $800/month for someone to monitor and respond to your reviews without being able to tell you what those reviews collectively mean is a bit like hiring someone to take your temperature every morning without being able to tell you why it keeps going up.
The question people ask when they search that phrase is really two questions in one. The first is whether paying attention to reviews matters at all. The second is whether paying someone else to handle it is worth the money.
The first answer is clearly yes. A business with a 4.4 rating on Google gets significantly more clicks than a 3.9 — the research on this is consistent and the effect is meaningful. More importantly, the reviews contain information that no other source gives you: unfiltered, unsolicited feedback from real customers about what they actually experienced. That information is worth acting on regardless of whether you pay for it or not.
We built GleamIQ specifically for the 80%. It connects to your review platforms — Google, Yelp, TripAdvisor, Facebook, Amazon, Shopify — pulls in everything automatically, and uses AI to find the themes and patterns inside your reviews. What's building, what's fading, what's specific to which location, and what changed since you made that operational decision three months ago.
It generates a consulting-quality PDF report from any view in 60 seconds — the kind of document that used to take a human analyst hours to produce. And it costs $49.99/month per business, all locations included.
It doesn't write your review responses. It doesn't run solicitation campaigns. It doesn't replace an agency for businesses that genuinely need one. What it does is give you the 80% — the intelligence layer — that most reputation management tools have never focused on and that most agencies quietly don't deliver well.
If you're at the stage where you're asking whether reputation management is worth it, GleamIQ is almost certainly the right starting point. Understand what your reviews are actually saying first. Then decide whether you need someone to help you act on it.
Connect your review platforms, and GleamIQ automatically finds the themes building inside your feedback — across every platform, all your locations, going back as far as your reviews go.
Get started — $49.99 / month →14-day money-back guarantee · No contracts · All locations included · admin@gleamiq.com