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· Karson Lawrence · Marketing  · 8 min read

Digital Marketing for Contractors: The Complete Lead Generation Playbook

Learn how successful contractors generate consistent leads through digital marketing. From Google Business Profile optimization to paid advertising, this guide covers everything you need to know.

Learn how successful contractors generate consistent leads through digital marketing. From Google Business Profile optimization to paid advertising, this guide covers everything you need to know.

Most contractors know they need better marketing. Few know exactly what to do. This comprehensive guide breaks down digital marketing into actionable strategies that actually work for home service businesses.

The Contractor Marketing Problem

Here’s what we hear constantly from contractors:

“I know I need to do more marketing, but I don’t know where to start.”

“I spent $5,000 on advertising and got nothing.”

“Everyone tells me something different.”

The truth? Marketing for contractors isn’t complicated—it’s just different from marketing for other businesses. What works for restaurants or retail doesn’t work for home services. You need strategies built for how customers actually find and choose contractors.


Understanding How Customers Find Contractors

Before spending a dollar on marketing, understand the customer journey.

The Decision Timeline

StageCustomer MindsetHow They Search
UnawareDon’t know they need youNot searching yet
AwareNotice a problem”Why is my AC making noise?”
ConsideringLooking for solutions”AC repair near me”
DecidingComparing optionsReading reviews, getting quotes
ActingReady to bookCalling, booking online

Key Insight: Most contractors only market to “Acting” stage customers. The best contractors market to all stages.

How Customers Choose

Research shows customers prioritize:

  1. Reviews and reputation (68% check reviews first)
  2. Response time (48% choose first company to respond)
  3. Online presence (73% visit website before calling)
  4. Referrals (83% trust recommendations from people they know)
  5. Price (Actually less important than most contractors think)

Your marketing must address these priorities.


The Marketing Foundation: Your Online Presence

Before driving traffic anywhere, ensure your destination converts.

Google Business Profile (GBP)

This is the most important free marketing tool available. For local contractors, GBP often drives more leads than your website.

Optimization Checklist:

✅ Claimed and verified ✅ Accurate business name, address, phone (NAP) ✅ Correct business categories (primary + secondary) ✅ Complete service area ✅ Business hours (including emergency availability) ✅ All services listed ✅ High-quality photos (team, trucks, work) ✅ Q&A section populated ✅ Regular posts (weekly minimum) ✅ Active review response (every review)

Pro Tips:

  • Add photos weekly (Google rewards fresh content)
  • Use posts for seasonal offers and tips
  • Add services with detailed descriptions
  • Enable messaging for more contact options
  • List attributes (women-owned, veteran-owned, etc.)

Your Website

Your website must do three things:

  1. Build credibility quickly
  2. Make contacting you easy
  3. Provide information customers want

Essential Website Elements:

ElementPurpose
Professional designCredibility
Clear phone numberConversion
Service area/locationsRelevance
Service descriptionsInformation
About page with teamTrust
Customer reviewsSocial proof
License/insurance infoCredibility
Mobile optimizationAccessibility
Fast load timeUser experience

The 5-Second Test: A visitor should know within 5 seconds:

  1. What you do
  2. Where you serve
  3. How to contact you

Local Citations

Your business information should be consistent across the internet:

Priority Platforms:

  • Google Business Profile
  • Bing Places
  • Apple Business Connect
  • Yelp
  • Facebook
  • Better Business Bureau
  • Angi
  • HomeAdvisor
  • Nextdoor
  • Industry-specific directories

Consistency matters. Same business name, address, phone everywhere.


Search Engine Optimization gets you found organically (without paying per click).

Local SEO Fundamentals

Target Keywords:

Keyword TypeExamplePurpose
Service + Location”AC repair Dallas”High intent
Service + Near Me”plumber near me”High intent
Problem-based”no hot water”Informational
Question-based”how often to service AC”Awareness

On-Page SEO:

  • Include target keywords in page titles
  • Write unique meta descriptions
  • Use header tags (H1, H2, H3) properly
  • Include location mentions naturally
  • Add service-specific pages for each service

Location Pages:

If you serve multiple cities, create location-specific pages:

  • /locations/dallas-ac-repair/
  • /locations/fort-worth-ac-repair/
  • /locations/plano-ac-repair/

Each page should have unique content relevant to that area.

Content Marketing

Blog Content That Works for Contractors:

Content TypeExamplePurpose
How-to guides”How to reset your AC”Attract searchers
Problem/solution”Why is my water bill high?”Address concerns
Seasonal tips”Preparing your plumbing for winter”Relevance
Local content”Water quality in [City]“Local relevance
Buying guides”How to choose a new AC system”Decision stage

Content Principles:

  • Answer real questions customers ask
  • Be genuinely helpful (not salesy)
  • Target specific keywords
  • Update content regularly
  • Include clear calls to action

Unlike SEO, paid advertising generates leads immediately—when done correctly.

How It Works: Your ad appears when someone searches your target keywords. You pay when they click.

Campaign Structure:

CampaignAd GroupKeywords
AC ServicesAC RepairAC repair, AC not working
AC InstallationNew AC, AC replacement
AC MaintenanceAC tune-up, AC service

Best Practices:

  • Separate branded and non-branded campaigns
  • Use location targeting strictly
  • Implement negative keywords aggressively
  • Create service-specific ad groups
  • Use ad extensions (call, location, callout)
  • Track calls as conversions

Budget Guidance:

  • Minimum: $500/month to test
  • Typical: $1,500-5,000/month for residential contractors
  • Set daily budgets to control spend
  • Start small, scale what works

Expected Metrics:

MetricTarget
Click-through rate (CTR)3-5%+
Cost per click (CPC)$15-50 (varies by market)
Conversion rate5-15%
Cost per lead$50-150

Google Local Services Ads (LSA)

How It Works: Pay-per-lead ads that appear at the very top of search results with Google Guarantee badge.

Advantages:

  • Top placement in search
  • Pay per lead (not click)
  • Google Guarantee builds trust
  • Typically lower cost per lead
  • Background check = credibility

Requirements:

  • Background checks for owner and technicians
  • License verification
  • Insurance verification
  • Business registration

Tips:

  • Respond to leads immediately (affects ranking)
  • Request reviews from LSA customers
  • Keep budget adequate to show consistently
  • Monitor lead quality and dispute bad leads

Facebook/Instagram Ads

Best for: Brand awareness, retargeting, special offers

Less effective for: Direct emergency service leads

When to Use:

  • Promoting maintenance agreements
  • Seasonal campaigns
  • New customer offers
  • Brand building
  • Retargeting website visitors

Ad Types:

  • Lead form ads (capture info without leaving Facebook)
  • Traffic ads (send to website)
  • Video ads (tell your story)
  • Carousel ads (show multiple services)

Retargeting

What It Is: Showing ads to people who already visited your website

Why It Works: Most visitors don’t convert on first visit. Retargeting brings them back.

Platforms:

  • Google Display Network
  • Facebook/Instagram
  • YouTube

Best Practices:

  • Segment by page visited
  • Different message for different stages
  • Frequency caps to avoid annoyance
  • Compelling offers to return

Reputation Management: Reviews Drive Revenue

Reviews are marketing. Managing them actively is essential.

Building Your Review Strategy

Where to Focus:

PlatformPriorityWhy
Google#1Impacts local SEO and shows in search
Facebook#2High visibility, social proof
Yelp#3Still influential, particularly for some trades
Industry sites#4BBB, Angi, HomeAdvisor

Asking for Reviews:

The best time to ask: Immediately after successful service

Methods:

  • Text message with direct link
  • Email follow-up with link
  • Technician asks in person
  • Receipt/invoice includes link
  • Automated review request software

What to Say: “We really appreciate your business! If you were happy with our service, would you mind taking a minute to leave us a review? [Link] It really helps our small business. Thanks!”

Responding to Reviews

Positive Reviews:

  • Thank them by name
  • Reference specific service if possible
  • Invite them back
  • Keep it personal, not templated

Example: “Thanks so much, Sarah! We’re glad the AC installation went smoothly and you’re staying cool this summer. Don’t hesitate to reach out if you need anything else!”

Negative Reviews:

  • Respond quickly (within 24 hours)
  • Remain professional (everyone is watching)
  • Apologize for their experience
  • Take conversation offline
  • Follow up after resolution

Example: “John, I’m sorry to hear about your experience. This isn’t the level of service we strive for. I’d like to personally make this right. Please call me directly at [phone] so we can address this. - [Owner name]”

Never:

  • Argue publicly
  • Get defensive
  • Make excuses
  • Ignore negative reviews
  • Fake positive reviews

Review Volume Goals

Business SizeReviews/Month TargetTotal Goal
Small (1-3 techs)5-1050+ total
Medium (4-10 techs)15-25150+ total
Large (10+ techs)25-50300+ total

Referral Marketing: Your Best Source

Referred customers convert at higher rates, spend more, and cost less to acquire.

Building a Referral System

Passive Referral Tactics:

  • Excellent service (table stakes)
  • Branded vehicles and uniforms
  • Leave-behind materials with cards for neighbors
  • Ask happy customers to spread the word

Active Referral Programs:

Program TypeOfferTracking
Simple referral$25-50 credit for referrerAsk on booking
Dual-sided$25 for referrer + $25 for new customerReferral code
VIP referralHigher rewards for repeat referrersTier system
Partner referralCommission to real estate agents, etc.Tracking codes

Implementation:

  • Make the program clear and simple
  • Remind customers regularly
  • Fulfill rewards quickly
  • Thank referrers personally
  • Track referral source on every job

Strategic Partnerships

Potential Partners:

PartnerOpportunity
Real estate agentsMove-in inspections, new homeowner referrals
Property managersMaintenance contracts, tenant service
Home inspectorsFound issues need fixing
Insurance agentsClaim-related repairs
Other contractorsComplementary services

Measuring Marketing Success

You can’t improve what you don’t measure.

Key Metrics to Track

Lead Metrics:

MetricWhat It Tells You
Total leadsVolume of opportunity
Lead sourceWhere leads come from
Cost per leadAcquisition efficiency
Lead qualityAre they real opportunities?

Conversion Metrics:

MetricWhat It Tells You
Lead to estimateQualification rate
Estimate to jobSales effectiveness
Overall conversionMarketing + sales efficiency
Revenue per leadFull value of marketing

ROI Metrics:

MetricCalculation
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)Marketing spend ÷ New customers
Return on Ad Spend (ROAS)Revenue from ads ÷ Ad spend
Marketing ROI(Revenue - Marketing cost) ÷ Marketing cost

Attribution Tracking

Know Where Leads Come From:

  • Dedicated phone numbers by channel
  • UTM parameters on URLs
  • “How did you hear about us?” (with specific options)
  • Call tracking software
  • Lead source field in CRM

Monthly Marketing Review:

ChannelSpendLeadsCost/LeadJobsRevenueROI
Google Ads$2,00040$5015$12,000500%
LSA$1,50035$4318$14,400860%
Facebook$50012$423$2,100320%
SEO$80025$3210$8,500962%
Referral$20015$1312$11,2005500%

Use data to shift budget toward best-performing channels.


Building Your Marketing Plan

Budget Guidelines

Rule of Thumb: Invest 5-10% of revenue in marketing

RevenueMarketing BudgetMonthly
$500K$25-50K$2,000-4,000
$1M$50-100K$4,000-8,000
$2M$100-200K$8,000-17,000
$5M$250-500K$20,000-40,000

Startup Phase: May need 10-15% while building awareness Established: Can often reduce to 5-8% with strong referral base

Budget Allocation

Typical Split:

Category% of Budget
Paid advertising40-50%
SEO/content20-25%
Website maintenance10-15%
Reputation management10-15%
Referral incentives5-10%

The 12-Month Marketing Calendar

MonthFocus Area
JanuaryNew year specials, planning
FebruaryOff-season offers
MarchSpring maintenance push
AprilPre-season tune-ups
MayPeak season preparation
JunePeak season service
JulyReplacement campaigns
AugustEnd-of-summer offers
SeptemberFall maintenance
OctoberHeating season prep
NovemberHoliday scheduling
DecemberYear-end reviews, planning

Getting Help

Marketing done right requires ongoing attention. Options for support:

DIY: You do everything

  • Best for: Very small operations, tight budgets
  • Requires: Time commitment, willingness to learn

Marketing Manager (Hire): Full-time employee

  • Best for: Companies with $2M+ revenue
  • Requires: Ability to manage marketing person

Marketing Agency: Outsourced experts

  • Best for: Mid-size companies wanting expertise
  • Requires: Budget ($2-5K+/month) and good agency selection

Consultant: Strategic guidance

  • Best for: Companies wanting direction but managing execution
  • Requires: Some internal capability

Start Generating More Leads Today

Marketing isn’t magic—it’s systematic effort in the right places.

This Week:

  • Optimize your Google Business Profile
  • Ask your last 5 customers for reviews
  • Verify your website loads fast on mobile

This Month:

  • Set up call tracking
  • Launch or optimize Google Ads
  • Create a review request process

This Quarter:

  • Build your content strategy
  • Implement referral program
  • Analyze and adjust based on data

Ready to build a lead generation machine? Let’s develop your marketing strategy →

At The KPS Group, we help contractors build marketing systems that generate consistent, qualified leads. Because great service deserves to be found.


Marketing is one piece of building a successful contracting business. Explore our complete resource library for more insights.

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