WooCommerce CRO Technique

How to add photo and video reviews plus Q&A to WooCommerce product pages

Adding customer photo and video reviews plus product-level Q&A gives WooCommerce PDPs two things standard text reviews often miss: real-world proof and answers to niche buying questions.

Summary

Bottom Line: On WooCommerce, the safest way to add photo/video reviews and Q&A is to enable core reviews first, then use either WooCommerce Product Reviews Pro for a more native Woo setup or a supported review platform such as Yotpo or Stamped for hosted widgets.

  • Put Q&A with reviews, or directly beside them, not on a separate help page. Baymard found community Q&A was used by 40% of test subjects when available, and the best-performing pattern was a hybrid of site-authored FAQs plus user Q&A.
  • Do not hide criticism. Baymard found 53% of users actively sought negative reviews, and users use those comments to judge fit, flaws and credibility.
  • For a native WooCommerce route, Product Reviews Pro supports reviews, questions, photos and videos from WooCommerce > Settings > Products > Reviews and central moderation in WooCommerce > Reviews.
  • For a hosted-widget route, Yotpo supports WooCommerce reviews, photos and Q&A, and Stamped supports photo/video reviews and Q&A with separate-placement options; Judge.me is no longer a viable WooCommerce option for new installs.
  • Keep media lightweight. Google’s performance guidance says modern formats such as WebP and AVIF can reduce bytes and improve LCP, while non-critical video should be lazy-loaded; Product Reviews Pro only allows videos by external embed rather than upload specifically to preserve site performance.

How To Implement

  • Start by turning on WooCommerce’s own reviews, because every route sits on top of that customer expectation

    Start by turning on WooCommerce’s own reviews, because every route sits on top of that customer expectation. In WordPress Dashboard > WooCommerce > Settings > Products > Reviews, enable product reviews, and decide whether to show the verified owner label and whether only verified owners can leave reviews.

  • Choose the implementation route that matches the store’s tolerance for external widgets and ongoing management

    Choose the implementation route that matches the store’s tolerance for external widgets and ongoing management. If you want a more native WooCommerce feel, install Product Reviews Pro via Plugins > Add New > Upload Plugin, then configure it in WooCommerce > Settings > Products > Reviews. Product Reviews Pro can enable contribution types for Reviews, Questions, Photos, Videos and optional comments, and it moves moderation into WooCommerce > Reviews where you can filter by contribution type, media and rating.

  • If you want hosted widgets, review-request flows and helpdesk integrations, use Yotpo or Stamped

    If you want hosted widgets, review-request flows and helpdesk integrations, use Yotpo or Stamped. Yotpo installs through Plugins > Add New, then asks you to connect the app key and secret, and it automatically adds the Reviews Widget and Star Rating to WooCommerce product pages, with Q&A available as an additional widget. Stamped enables photo/video reviews in Settings > Customize > Reviews > Photos & Videos and enables Q&A in Settings > Displays > Widgets > Main Widget > Customization.

  • Do not spec a fresh WooCommerce build around Judge.me

    Do not spec a fresh WooCommerce build around Judge.me. Judge.me’s own help centre says WooCommerce sunset on 31 October 2025 and that all non-Shopify platforms have now been sunset.

  • Place Q&A inside the reviews module or immediately adjacent to it

    Place Q&A inside the reviews module or immediately adjacent to it. For classic themes, WooCommerce product tabs are controlled through the woocommerce_product_tabs filter, and the reviews section is rendered by single-product-reviews.php, which themes can override. Product Reviews Pro uses the same tab area and is compatible with WooCommerce Tab Manager if you need to rename or reorder the Reviews/Discussion tab.

  • For block themes / Site Editor, edit Appearance > Editor > Templates > Single Product and keep the Product Details block

    For block themes / Site Editor, edit Appearance > Editor > Templates > Single Product and keep the Product Details block in the layout, because that block outputs the Description, Additional Information and Reviews tabs dynamically. If you are using a hosted widget instead of the native reviews surface, place the widget in the Single Product template near the Product Details area rather than burying it lower on the page. WooCommerce’s block docs also note that styling should be handled through global styles or theme.json, not brittle selector hacks where possible.

  • If you need a separate Q&A panel rather than a combined widget, the exact implementation varies by tool

    If you need a separate Q&A panel rather than a combined widget, the exact implementation varies by tool. Stamped explicitly supports a standalone Q&A section via <div class="stamped-questions-placeholder"></div>, while Yotpo’s documentation says the default pattern is a combined Reviews/Q&A widget with two tabs and provides separate-placement instructions for its legacy dedicated Q&A widget. That means Stamped is the cleaner out-of-the-box choice when you know you want Q&A in a distinct PDP position.

  • Seed the first content before rollout

    Seed the first content before rollout. Baymard’s research is clear that purely community-driven Q&A often fails because sections are empty or unanswered, and that the best-performing pattern is a hybrid solution with site-authored FAQs plus user Q&A. In practice, that means taking your most common pre-sale tickets, live chat transcripts and email questions and turning them into the first 5–10 FAQ/Q&A entries on your highest-traffic PDPs, then inviting past purchasers to answer edge-case questions the site copy cannot credibly answer on its own. Stamped can send questions to past customers, and Yotpo routes questions to both the owner and previous purchasers.

  • Add measurement before you publish

    Add measurement before you publish. GA4 already gives you the ecommerce events you need for the main funnel, but Google’s documentation also supports recommended and custom events, so create custom interaction events such as review_media_open, review_filter_use, product_question_submit, product_question_expand, and product_answer_click either in GTM or as GA4 custom events. That lets you separate “people saw it” from “people used it”.

  • Set a moderation rulebook and a reply SLA before launch

    Set a moderation rulebook and a reply SLA before launch. Product Reviews Pro supports moderation, flags and media removal in WooCommerce > Reviews. Yotpo centralises review and Q&A moderation in its moderation console. Stamped lets you redirect review and Q&A notifications to a helpdesk mailbox and reply from helpdesk workflows. For StrategyFive’s kind of client, the practical standard is simple: every new question gets owned by support, triaged the same working day if possible, and either answered publicly or escalated internally before it goes stale.

  • Keep uploaded media from dragging down the PDP

    Keep uploaded media from dragging down the PDP. Google’s performance documentation recommends modern image formats, right-sized imagery and lazy loading for non-critical media. Do not let a big review-media gallery become the PDP’s LCP element. Keep the main hero image fast, compress review photos, and lazy-load any review video or deep media panel that sits below the fold. Product Reviews Pro already avoids direct video uploads and only allows video embeds from external sources such as YouTube, explicitly for performance reasons.

  • Finally, treat schema as a bonus, not the strategy

    Finally, treat schema as a bonus, not the strategy. Product Reviews Pro adds or refines structured data for reviews, questions and media contributions, but Google’s own guidelines say structured data creates eligibility, not a guarantee, for rich results.

How To Measure

The primary KPI is PDP conversion rate for the treated product set: use GA4 ecommerce events to compare view_item sessions against downstream add_to_cart and purchase activity before and after rollout. Secondary KPIs are content-interaction rate on the review/Q&A module, PDP exits, and pre-sale support contacts per 1,000 PDP sessions. Google recommends standard ecommerce events for sales behaviour and supports custom events for additional interactions, so this technique should be measured with both.

In GA4, read this in an Exploration or a customised ecommerce report using a segment for the products where the module changed. At minimum, compare treated PDPs by device category, because mobile performance and interaction friction can differ materially from desktop. Success looks like a higher content-interaction rate, fewer PDP exits and fewer pre-sale contacts, followed by an improvement in PDP conversion rate or RPV for users who viewed those PDPs.

Use these custom interaction events as the minimum measurement layer: review_media_open, review_filter_use, review_sort_use, product_question_submit, product_question_expand, product_question_answer_click, and review_helpful_vote. Mark only true business outcomes as key events; keep interaction events as diagnostics unless a specific interaction genuinely maps to a business goal.

Your guardrail metrics are AOV, checkout completion, and field LCP / INP / CLS on the affected PDPs. Google’s Core Web Vitals guidance still uses the standard “good” thresholds of LCP 2.5s or less, INP 200ms or less, and CLS 0.1 or less. If review media or third-party widgets worsen those scores, the rollout is not clean, even if interaction goes up.

Pitfalls

  • A common mistake is launching community Q&A with no seeding and no owner. Baymard found that many community-driven Q&As end up empty or unanswered, which destroys their value; the best-performing pattern is a hybrid of curated FAQ content plus community Q&A.
  • Another mistake is moderating by sentiment instead of by policy. In the UK, the CMA’s 2025 guidance requires businesses to have measures against fake and misleading reviews, and the CMA’s 2026 consumer-law investigations explicitly include concerns about suppressed 1-star reviews and undisclosed discounts for 5-star reviews. Moderate for fraud, abuse, off-topic content and personal data, not for whether the review is flattering.
  • A third mistake is letting media bloat the PDP. Review galleries feel persuasive, but oversized images, eager-loaded widgets and autoplay video can worsen LCP and make the page feel sticky on mobile. Google’s performance guidance and Product Reviews Pro’s design choice to allow only video embeds, not uploads, both point the same way: keep review media visible, but not expensive.
  • A common myth is that Q&A replaces reviews. It does not. Reviews are where shoppers often go to find criticism and edge-case dissatisfaction, while Q&A is better at handling unanticipated questions, unique use cases and novice-buyer uncertainty. You need both.
  • Another myth is that every review app is interchangeable on WooCommerce. They are not. Product Reviews Pro is more native to WooCommerce’s own product surfaces, Yotpo and Stamped bring stronger hosted-widget and support-workflow options, and Judge.me is now sunset on WooCommerce. Yotpo also notes that its WooCommerce plugin does not support some third-party builders such as Elementor and Divi.

Examples

FAQs

Sources & Further Reading

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About This Page

  • Written By: Eliot Webb – Founder & WooCommerce CRO Consultant
  • Last Reviewed: 5 Jun 2026
  • Last Updated: