Think about the last time your front desk staff had a calm moment. You probably can't.
Between checking patients in, verifying insurance, answering the phone, and scheduling follow-ups, the idea of pausing to ask, "Hey, would you mind leaving us a Google review?" feels almost comical.
So it doesn't happen. Not consistently, anyway.
Meanwhile, your happy patients walk out the door and go on with their day.
They don't think about reviews. They felt good about their visit, and that's the end of it. The only patients who do think about reviews are the ones who had a bad experience. They'll find your Google Business Profile on their own time.
That's the quiet problem sitting inside most multi-location practices.
Your online reputation is shaped by a vocal minority because the silent majority never gets asked.
Veradigm EHR handles your clinical workflows beautifully. It was built for charting, orders, and documentation, not for reputation management.
There's no built-in feature to automatically request Google reviews, and no one expects there to be. But that gap creates a real business problem. About 90% of new patients start their search on Google, and what they see on your profile often doesn't reflect the actual quality of care you deliver.
This is where the conversation about a Veradigm EHR staff automated review request workflow Google becomes urgent.
The goal isn't to add another task to your front desk. It's to remove one.
Curogram sits alongside Veradigm and turns review generation into a background process, so your team keeps doing what they do best while your reputation catches up to your care.
Here's the scene. A patient finishes their appointment and walks to the front desk. Your team member is already juggling a copay, a rescheduled follow-up, and a ringing phone.
Somewhere in that chaos, they're supposed to remember to ask for a review.
Maybe they hand out a card with a QR code.
Maybe they send a manual email later that day.
Maybe they simply forget, because they're human and they've done this checkout thirty times already before lunch.
None of these methods scale. Cards get tossed or lost in a coat pocket. Manual emails get buried, with around 70% never opened at all.
And across multiple locations, the pattern drifts. One manager pushes hard on reviews, another doesn't, and your Google Business Profiles end up looking wildly different from site to site.
The ask itself isn't the issue. The timing is.
By the time a patient gets home, the visit is no longer top of mind. Life takes over.
Even the most satisfied patient is unlikely to log into Google later that evening to write a thoughtful review of a routine appointment. That window of warmth closes fast, usually within the first hour after discharge.
Front desk review solicitation automation exists precisely because humans can't hit that window reliably.
A person can, on a good day, remember to ask maybe half the patients who check out.
A system, once configured, asks every single one of them, every single time, within minutes of the visit ending.
Let's put some numbers on this. Say you run three locations, each seeing 40 patients a day. That's 120 patients walking out your doors daily across the practice.
In a manual setup, your team might request reviews from roughly a third of those patients on a good day.
Of the ones asked, maybe 10% to 15% actually follow through and post. The math lands somewhere around 4 or 5 reviews captured per day across all three sites combined.
But the real issue isn't the total. It's the imbalance. One site pulls ahead because a manager pushes hard on the ask. Another site barely moves because the team is short-staffed that week.
Over a month, your Google Business Profiles start telling three different stories about the same practice.
Potential patients notice. They draw conclusions about each location's quality that have nothing to do with actual care. This means your reputation isn't reflecting reality.
It's reflecting which manager remembered to nag their staff hardest.
Most Allscripts Professional front desk review requests strategies run on willpower. Ask harder. Remind the team. Put up a sign. Print a new flyer.
None of it addresses the real issue, which is that manual review generation is fundamentally at odds with how a busy front desk actually works.
When you trace the failure points, they fall into a few predictable patterns:
The staff aren't lazy. They're overloaded.
When you tell a receptionist that reviews are a priority, you're layering a new responsibility on top of twelve existing ones.
The first time a phone rings during checkout, the review ask disappears. It has to, because the phone is louder than the policy.
Then there's the guilt loop. Staff feel bad they aren't asking. Management feels frustrated that counts are low. Everyone knows reviews matter for medical practice staff review management Veradigm users, but no one has the bandwidth to fix it at the workflow level.
So the problem calcifies.
Email is often the default fallback, and it doesn't work well here.
Email open rates for healthcare messages hover around 20% to 30%.
Add the extra friction of clicking a link, navigating to Google, and signing in, and your conversion from email to posted review drops to near zero.
Text is different. SMS open rates sit around 98%, and most messages are read within 3 minutes.
When a Veradigm practice Google reviews staff burden finally gets addressed through text rather than email, the numbers shift dramatically.
You're meeting patients on the channel they actually use, at the moment they're most willing to engage.
Even good outreach fails if it arrives too late. A review request sent the next day competes with everything else in a patient's inbox. A review request sent three days later feels like homework.
The window that matters is the first 60 minutes after checkout, while the visit is still emotionally fresh. Hitting that window manually is nearly impossible. Hitting it automatically is trivial, if the system is wired correctly.
This is where an automated patient review workflow EHR integration does real work. Instead of asking staff to remember, you let the EHR do the remembering.
Curogram connects to Veradigm and watches for the discharge event.
When a patient is checked out in Veradigm, Curogram receives that signal and triggers a branded text message to the patient within minutes.
The text is short, warm, and contains a one-tap link to your Google Business Profile review form.
The patient taps. They rate their visit. The review posts. Your staff does nothing different than they did yesterday.
Here's the simple version.
A patient completes their visit and gets marked as discharged in Veradigm. Curogram reads that discharge timestamp, identifies the correct location, and sends a personalized text to the patient within 5 to 10 minutes.
The patient taps the link and leaves a review on your Google Business Profile. If they don't respond, no follow-up spam is sent. If they opt out, they never receive another request.
That's the whole workflow. No cards, no apps to download, no staff training beyond a brief orientation.
The feedback loop runs quietly in the background, and Veradigm remains your clinical system of record.
The gap between SMS and email performance isn't small. It's enormous.
| Channel | Open Rate | Typical Response Window | Review Conversion |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20%–30% | 24+ hours | Very low | |
| Printed card | Varies wildly | Days to weeks | Near zero |
| SMS (automated post-visit) | ~98% | Under 3 minutes | Meaningfully higher |
In practice, this means you're no longer fighting for attention. You're arriving at the exact moment your patient is most likely to act, through the channel they check most often.
Multiply that advantage across hundreds of visits a week, and the review count moves quickly.
Multi-location practices get an extra benefit. Curogram can route each patient to the correct Google Business Profile based on the Veradigm location they visited.
A patient at Site A gets a link to Site A's profile.
A patient at Site C gets Site C's. Reviews land where they should, and no location gets starved of feedback because a manager forgot to push the policy.
That consistency is quietly powerful. Every location runs the same protocol without any of them having to remember it.
Numbers tell this story better than adjectives. One multi-location practice that deployed Curogram alongside Veradigm went from roughly 993 total reviews across all sites, many old and some negative, to 8,159 total reviews within a few months.
The breakdown is what matters. In the first 3 months alone, they added 1,064 new 5-star reviews. That's not a slow drip.
That's an average of more than 350 new 5-star reviews per month, with zero additional effort from the front desk.
Let's translate this into something tangible. If your front desk previously spent even 30 seconds per patient asking about reviews, across 120 patients a day that's an hour of staff time daily.
Automate that ask and you're reclaiming roughly 5 hours of front desk capacity per week, per location. Across 3 sites, that's 15 hours a week back in the practice's pocket.
For your team, that time goes back into patient care, phone coverage, and collections, the things staff actually should be doing.
For your reputation, the shift is just as meaningful. A consistent stream of recent 5-star reviews pushes your Google Business Profile higher in local search rankings. New patients searching for providers in your area see fresh, positive feedback at the top of the results.
That translates into more patient inquiries without a dollar spent on paid advertising.
The most underrated outcome is cultural. Staff stop feeling guilty about review counts. Managers stop nagging. Reviews stop being a topic in weekly meetings because they simply happen.
Reputation quietly becomes a background asset rather than a recurring fire drill. Your team gets credit for delivering great care, and the system gets credit for remembering to ask. That's the division of labor that actually works in a busy practice.
Your Veradigm EHR was built for clinical excellence. It handles charting, orders, and documentation with precision. What it wasn't designed for is reputation building, and that's not a flaw. It's just a gap, and gaps can be filled.
Curogram fills that gap without touching your clinical workflow. Patients still check in the way they always have.
Your providers still chart in Veradigm. Your front desk still runs checkout the same way they ran it yesterday.
The only difference is that your Google Business Profile quietly fills up with recent, positive reviews from the patients who already love your practice.
That shift is not cosmetic. It's operational. Every new 5-star review pushes your practice higher in local search, increases the trust of potential patients browsing your profile, and compounds over time.
One practice saw 1,064 new 5-star reviews in 3 months. Another could be yours in the next quarter if the workflow is wired correctly.
And the best part is what your staff won't notice.
No new task. No new login. No new reminder.
Just a review count that climbs week after week without anyone having to chase it.
Schedule a Demo with Curogram and walk through a live example of a patient visit flowing from Veradigm discharge to a posted Google review. You'll see exactly how your team's