How do you handle negative feedback or reviews about your product?
Hamza Afzal Butt
14 replies
Replies
Lorenz Sell@lorenzsell
Sutra
I always try to reach out to anyone sharing negative feedback to under their issue and explore how we can resolve it. I consider negative feedback to be super valuable in that way.
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Vozo AI
Handling negative feedback is crucial for growth. I always listen carefully, address concerns promptly, and use the feedback to improve the product.
I like negative feedback. It is information to improve.
Of course, it has to be expressed politely. If not, delete it or ignore it.
The worst is indifference. If I launch something and I have no feedback I do not know what I have to change, I cannot progress.
Analyze it, categorize it.
If the feedback / review are related to a problem in UX try to help the user to solve it or find a workaround to solve their pain.
If itās a complaint about something missing from the product , then stack it and see if there are other feedback similar.
If so identify the pain and missing solution and prioritize it according to the existing roadmap / plan of developments
Well, just go and talk to them, understand their issues, resolve them and if possible, ask them to re-review them or upgrade their review. No alternatives. Your users are your ultimate checkers so no short-cuts there. Thanks!
Hey there, appreciate the feedback! Taking constructive criticism is like debugging code - it may be a bit tough, but it's essential for improving our product. Thanks for helping us fine-tune things!
Here is a Way to handle negative feedback or reviews about your product
ā¢ Stay Calm & Gather Details: Don't react impulsively. Read the feedback and try to understand the issue.
ā¢ Acknowledge & Apologize: Thank them for sharing and apologize for their experience.
ā¢ Offer Solutions: If possible, try to resolve the problem and offer ways to improve their experience.
ā¢ Take it Offline: Move the conversation to email or phone to discuss specifics.
ā¢ Learn & Improve: Use the feedback to identify areas for improvement in your product.
I will first determine whether this person is my target customer. Indeed, your product may not satisfy everyone's needs, but that's okay. In the MVP stage, you should focus more on your core customers.
However, always try to reply with polite words because others will see them.
If I can handle the comment and convert it into a positive outcome, I will do so. If not, I will delete itš.
Negative reviews are always tough but a necessary evil. Best to take them to heart, see what you can learn, and use them as motivation to improve. Also important to publicly respond in a calm, constructive way - acknowledge their concerns, explain what steps you're taking to fix issues, and invite them to reach out directly to make things right. Bad reviews happen to everyone, it's how you handle them that counts.
Negative reviews can sting, but they're important to learn from. I try to respond publicly in a genuine, non-defensive way - thank them for the feedback, acknowledge their experience, and share any relevant context or how we plan to address it. Responding shows you care and are accountable. Privately, discuss as a team what you can improve, but don't overreact to a small number of negative reviews amid mostly positive ones. Stay focused on delivering a great product!
Negative reviews can be tough but they're an opportunity to show you care about your customers. Respond promptly, acknowledge their concern, and try to make it right if possible. Use the feedback to improve your product. Having a mix of positive and negative reviews can also build trust by showing you're a real company. Stay professional and don't argue with reviewers.
I try to keep calm and look for any valid points in the feedback. For example, if a customer says somethingās wrong with my product, Iāll see if thereās a fix I can implement. If the review feels more like venting, I just let it slide. Iāve found that responding politely can sometimes turn a negative review into a positive experience.