Google Reviews Are the Foundation. Here's What Real Estate Professionals Build on Top.

Google Reviews Are Worth Having. Full Stop.
If you’re a real estate professional with fewer than 20 Google reviews, that’s the first problem to solve. When someone searches your name, Google is where they land. A thin profile or a low average there will cost you business before you ever get a chance to have a conversation.
Google reviews help your SEO, establish basic online credibility, and matter to every prospect who runs a search on you before calling. Getting more of them should be an active priority, not an afterthought. This isn’t about whether Google reviews are good enough. They are.
What Google Reviews Do Well
Google reviews show up in search results. They affect your local ranking. They’re visible to anyone who looks you up, on any device, without needing to know which platform to check. For buyers and borrowers doing basic research on a professional they’ve been referred to, a Google profile with strong reviews is often the first real validation they see.
Google also actively removes fake reviews. The platform has invested significantly in fraud detection, and incentivized or fabricated reviews are regularly filtered out. That’s not a flaw in the system. That’s the system working correctly. A real estate market where fake reviews can’t buy credibility is a better market for everyone who’s earned their reputation legitimately. The legitimately great professionals rise to the top.
What Hometrics Adds (And Why It’s Different)
Google and Hometrics serve different purposes, and the distinction is worth understanding clearly.
Google reviews are broad and public — great for SEO and for giving any prospective client a quick read on who you are. Hometrics is built for depth and verification. The platform verifies that reviewers are real clients, and your Hometrics profile carries a badge that signals to buyers your reviews have been validated, not just gathered from whoever happened to leave one. That distinction matters when buyers are making the largest financial decision of their lives. Learn more about how performance badges are earned on the Hometrics platform.
Beyond verification, Hometrics captures feedback that isn’t necessarily tied to a single transaction. Google reviews come mostly from the highest-emotion moments: the ecstatic buyer at closing, the frustrated client after a deal fell through. The clients in between — the ones who had a solid experience, appreciated your guidance, and just didn’t think to leave a review — often go uncollected without a systematic ask.
Hometrics also captures the non-transactional touchpoints that are increasingly part of a real estate professional’s value: consultation calls, buyer education sessions, the relationship conversations that don’t end in a signed contract but still reflect on who you are as a professional. A client’s experience with you doesn’t always begin and end at closing. Hometrics is built to capture that broader picture.
The Practical Case for Both
A Google profile with strong reviews helps you show up in searches and establishes broad online credibility. A Hometrics profile with verified reviews, backed by the badge that signals authenticity, builds trust with buyers and referral partners who look past the surface.
The professionals building the most defensible reputations don’t choose between the two. They build volume consistently in both places and let the combined record speak for itself.
You can see what that looks like in practice on the Baltimore Metro Leaderboard — the top-ranked professionals in every vertical are building Google reviews and Hometrics reviews at the same time, and the gap between them and the rest of the market grows every week.
See Where Your Company Ranks
The Hometrics Baltimore Metro Leaderboard tracks over 600 companies across Mortgage, Title & Escrow, Real Estate, Insurance, and Legal — ranked publicly by total Google Reviews, updated every Wednesday.
The rankings are merit-based and fully visible to everyone in the market. Every company can see where they stand, where their competitors stand, and how fast the gap is moving. The companies leading their verticals built a system. The ones watching from further down are watching that gap compound every week.
Reviews work like interest. Starting later always costs more than starting now.
