Day 51: Install Ominvo on your home screen. And a page about the reviews you're not getting.
Two things shipped today. One you can install. One you can read.
Install Ominvo on your phone or desktop
Yesterday's service worker was the prerequisite. Today is the part you actually see — a small card in the bottom-right corner of the site that says "Install Ominvo." Click it, and Ominvo installs as an app. Home screen icon on Android. Start menu shortcut on Windows. Dock entry on macOS Chrome. It opens in its own window with no browser address bar, no tabs, no distractions. Same site, different surface.
The card knows when to show itself and when to disappear. If Ominvo is already installed, no card. If you dismiss it, it waits seven days before asking again. If you're on iPhone Safari — where Apple doesn't expose an install API at all — the card shows the actual instructions instead: tap the Share icon, choose Add to Home Screen. Honest workaround for a platform that doesn't give us better options.
There's a small companion change that ships with this: when you switch back to an open Ominvo tab, the service worker checks for updates on the spot instead of waiting for the next navigation. If you're already a regular user and we ship a fix at 11am, you get it the next time you tab over — not the next time you click a link. Faster propagation for the kind of small fixes that happen between launches.
This doesn't change anything about how Ominvo works. It changes how close it sits to your daily tools. For a salon owner checking reviews between appointments, the difference between "open browser, type ominvo.com" and "tap the icon on the home screen" is the difference between something you remember to do and something you actually do.
A new page: review generation, and why it's the GigaChad differentiator
There's a new feature page at /features/review-generation. It does something the other feature pages don't — instead of explaining what a feature does, it explains where each tier enters the review loop.
Five steps: customer has the experience, you ask for the review, review gets posted on Google, Ominvo alerts you, you reply with AI in one click. The Chad tier joins at step three. GigaChad joins at step one. That's the whole argument, and the page makes it with a single diagram instead of three paragraphs.
The reason this matters: most review-management tools are reactive. They handle reviews that already exist. They're useful for replying faster, surfacing patterns, getting alerts. Chad does all of that. But none of it changes how many reviews you actually get. The volume is whatever your customers happened to leave.
Review generation flips that. QR codes for the counter. Pre-filled SMS templates to send after the appointment. You decide when to ask, who to ask, where to ask. The reviews you get start matching the customers you served, not the loud minority who would've reviewed you anyway.
The honest caveat is on the page: QR codes are live today for GigaChad subscribers. SMS launches with the Twilio rollout after beta. The page says so directly. If you want the full plan comparison, the pricing page lays out what each tier includes.
If you're still mapping out the daily flow or thinking about how this connects to the AI replies on the back end, those pages are linked too.
What's next
Day 52 is the full E2E QA pass — every public page, every auth flow, every Settings card, the whole testimonials moderation loop. Less new code, more breaking what's already there to find what's wrong before paying customers do.
If you want to try the install button: the card shows up on the homepage about five seconds in. Or just visit /features/review-generation and see the new page directly.
Written by
The founder of Ominvo
Building review management for single-location small businesses. Join the waitlist →