What To Do With a Bad Review
by Molly Jo Realy @RealMoJo68
Have you experienced a bad review?
I say experienced because that’s really what it is, isn’t it? You don’t just read it and move on. Not if it’s about yourbook. Am I right?
A while back, I had such an experience, and was able to use it as a Cinderella moment.
Grab yourself a glass of tea while I tell you a story.First, the set up.
Last summer, I set up one of my Kindle books for a two-day free giveaway. Good marketing, I thought. It would get The Unemployment Cookbook, and my name, into a few more households, and hopefully lead to some better sales down the road.
And then, the conflict.
The plan was working, as more four- and five-star reviews were left on the page. That is, until, well, let’s just say someone forgot to put some honey in their tea that morning. Not only was this particular review negative, it was personally directed at me. By someone who didn’t know me. This troll bashed my recipes, my cookbook, and me without one hint of compassion or understanding.
it kept gnawing at me like a tick on a dog. I tried to let it go. But it kept gnawing at me like a tick on a dog. I wasn’t brave enough to comment on the review and tell the troll how wrong he/she was. How he/she had obviously not read the intro or understood why I wrote the Cookbook to begin with. Nor had he/she bothered to look at my notes for each recipe which allow for the cook to fix it to fit their own family, wallet and taste. No, I didn’t say any of that. I just stewed. (See what I did there?)
And then the resolution.
A few days later, I made a small comment on Facebook. I wasn’t looking for affirmations or kudos. I just wanted to share how words, especially unearned harsh ones, can be a speed bump on our happy road.
After a matter of minutes, my Swarm came to my rescue, unbidden and unbeknownst to me. Hours later when I checked my social media stats, I had emails and Tweets and comments and shares. Good review after good review poured in, contradicting the bad one. Comments and rebuffs countered his/her position. The more the reviews came in, the more I thanked the readers on the Facebook post stream, which boosted visibility of the original post, which created more reviews in my defense.
The happy ending.The happy ending.
At the end of the day, that one bad review led to over ten good reviews, and The Unemployment Cookbook was listed in the Amazon Top 100 Paid Reference Books. Not only that, but because I had waited until the giveaway was over to post anything, the new attention garnered a few unexpected sales.
The takeaway.
You can’t stop people from being, well, people. There’s bound to be one bad apple in the barrel now and then. What you can do is be real. Thank your Swarm for the good reviews, and share with them the bad. Then watch them buzz to back you up. It’s a sweet thing to have a community.
With some sweet tea and a spoonful of honey,~ Happy writing.
Molly Jo
TWEETABLESWhat to do with a BAD review? Turn it into GOOD #marketing - @RealMoJo68 (Click to Tweet)
Turning a bad review into good marketing - @RealMojo68 (Click to Tweet)
Molly Jo is a writer, editor, social media ninja, and producer of the weekly Firsts in Fiction podcast. She has been featured in children’s magazines, on blogs and devotional websites, and her short stories have earned her awards and scholarships from nationally acclaimed writing programs. She is the founder of New Inklings Press and author of
The Unemployment Cookbook: Ideas for Feeding Families One Meal at a Time,
and other books available through her website and on Amazon.Her current work in progress, NOLA, is a location mystery set in New Orleans and is scheduled for publication in late 2016.
You can find her on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and her blog, Frankly, My Dear . . .

I say experienced because that’s really what it is, isn’t it? You don’t just read it and move on. Not if it’s about yourbook. Am I right?
A while back, I had such an experience, and was able to use it as a Cinderella moment.
Grab yourself a glass of tea while I tell you a story.First, the set up.
Last summer, I set up one of my Kindle books for a two-day free giveaway. Good marketing, I thought. It would get The Unemployment Cookbook, and my name, into a few more households, and hopefully lead to some better sales down the road.
And then, the conflict.
The plan was working, as more four- and five-star reviews were left on the page. That is, until, well, let’s just say someone forgot to put some honey in their tea that morning. Not only was this particular review negative, it was personally directed at me. By someone who didn’t know me. This troll bashed my recipes, my cookbook, and me without one hint of compassion or understanding.

And then the resolution.
A few days later, I made a small comment on Facebook. I wasn’t looking for affirmations or kudos. I just wanted to share how words, especially unearned harsh ones, can be a speed bump on our happy road.
After a matter of minutes, my Swarm came to my rescue, unbidden and unbeknownst to me. Hours later when I checked my social media stats, I had emails and Tweets and comments and shares. Good review after good review poured in, contradicting the bad one. Comments and rebuffs countered his/her position. The more the reviews came in, the more I thanked the readers on the Facebook post stream, which boosted visibility of the original post, which created more reviews in my defense.

At the end of the day, that one bad review led to over ten good reviews, and The Unemployment Cookbook was listed in the Amazon Top 100 Paid Reference Books. Not only that, but because I had waited until the giveaway was over to post anything, the new attention garnered a few unexpected sales.
The takeaway.
You can’t stop people from being, well, people. There’s bound to be one bad apple in the barrel now and then. What you can do is be real. Thank your Swarm for the good reviews, and share with them the bad. Then watch them buzz to back you up. It’s a sweet thing to have a community.
With some sweet tea and a spoonful of honey,~ Happy writing.
Molly Jo
TWEETABLESWhat to do with a BAD review? Turn it into GOOD #marketing - @RealMoJo68 (Click to Tweet)
Turning a bad review into good marketing - @RealMojo68 (Click to Tweet)

You can find her on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and her blog, Frankly, My Dear . . .
Published on July 18, 2016 01:00
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