People don't review
a car ride.
They review how it felt.
8,000 trips. Six years. Here's how it felt — in their words, never mine.
"[YOUR SINGLE STRONGEST TESTIMONIAL — the one that makes the case alone. Big enough to be the only thing on screen.]"
"[YOUR STRONGEST CHARACTER TESTIMONIAL — trusted him with my mother, six years, never once late.]"
Sixty seconds, unscripted.
Riders, front camera, one take each.
"[Best line.]" — [Name], [City]
"[Best line.]" — [Name], [City]
"[Best line.]" — [Name], [City]
The rest of the wall.
Volume is the point. One glowing review could be luck. A wall of them is a pattern.
"[SERVICE TESTIMONIAL — 2–4 sentences, specifics only: the 4:50 a.m. pickup already outside, bold the key phrase.]"
[Role · City] · Google ↗
"[UBER/LYFT IN-APP COMPLIMENT — paste the real ones: the 4.98 has receipts.]"
"[CHARACTER TESTIMONIAL — work ethic and calm: the person you want driving at 4 a.m.]"
[Relationship]
"[SERVICE TESTIMONIAL — before/after: what rides were like on the apps vs. now.]"
[Role · City] · Yelp ↗
"[SERVICE TESTIMONIAL — the referral story: who they've sent to Danh and why.]"
[Role · City] · Google ↗
"[SERVICE TESTIMONIAL — corporate angle: the quiet car before the big meeting.]"
[Title · Company]
Every quote is real and used with written permission. Placeholders stay until the real thing exists — no fabricated reviews, ever.
Ridden with me?
Add your brick to the wall.
Sixty seconds of video or two honest sentences. It's the single most valuable thing a rider can give a one-person business.