Accounting is a referral-driven profession. Most firm owners know that. What many underestimate is how much of that referral process now runs through Google before it ever reaches a phone call.
When a prospect receives a referral to your firm, the next thing they do is search your name. What they find — your Google rating, the number of reviews, how you responded to a negative comment two years ago — shapes whether they book a consultation or quietly move on to the next firm on their list.
This isn't speculative. Industry benchmarks consistently show that service businesses with higher review counts and ratings convert prospects at meaningfully higher rates than comparable firms with sparse or negative profiles. Accounting firms are no exception.
There are three specific ways your online reputation affects revenue:
- Referral conversion: Prospects referred to your firm validate the recommendation by reading reviews. A thin or mixed profile creates doubt that kills warm leads.
- Direct search discovery: Google uses review signals — volume, recency, and response rate — as local ranking factors. Firms with stronger profiles appear higher in Map Pack results for searches like "CPA near me" or "tax accountant [city]."
- Competitive differentiation: In markets where multiple qualified firms exist, online reputation often becomes the deciding factor for price-sensitive or first-time clients.
The firms that treat reputation management as an ongoing operational process — not a crisis response activity — consistently outperform those that only pay attention when something goes wrong.