> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.aresdeploy.com/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# What's the Best Way to Get Landscaping Leads?

> How landscaping companies generate and book leads in practice, covering seasonal timing, before-and-after creative, neighborhood targeting, and fast response.

<Note>
  **Key takeaway:** The best way to get landscaping leads is geo-targeted ads built around real before-and-after photos, paired with instant lead response, since one-time design/build and recurring maintenance need different funnels entirely.
</Note>

Landscaping leads mostly come from three places: local search, paid social with visual proof, and referrals inside a neighborhood you already work in. Which one to prioritize depends on whether you're selling a \$15,000 backyard remodel or a \$150-a-month mowing route.

That distinction drives most of the decisions below. A design/build lead wants proof you can execute a specific look; a maintenance lead just wants someone reliable on schedule. Treating both like one funnel is the most common reason landscaping ad spend underperforms.

## What counts as a good landscaping lead?

A qualified landscaping lead is defined as a homeowner or property manager with a real project or recurring need and budget to move this season, not a form-fill from someone pricing options six months out. Volume matters less than how many leads are close to ready, given how tight install season is.

Neighborhood clustering means concentrating ad spend and creative on a handful of streets or ZIP codes where you already have finished jobs, instead of an entire metro. It works because landscaping is unusually visible; a finished patio or a re-sodded front yard sits in public for months, and neighbors notice.

## Why does seasonality change the whole strategy?

Landscaping demand isn't flat, and pretending it is wastes budget. Design/build inquiries spike in spring and again in early fall in most US markets, then drop off in peak summer heat and mid-winter. Maintenance leads are steadier but still ramp when grass starts growing.

A fixed monthly ad budget is the wrong tool for that pattern. Spend should scale up ahead of the two install windows and shift toward brand-building and contract renewals in the slow months, rather than run one flat campaign that overpays for junk leads in December and underbids the month homeowners are calling around.

## Recurring maintenance vs. one-time design/build: different lead problems

These are two different businesses wearing one name, and they need different lead generation:

* **Design/build** needs high-intent search and portfolio-driven social ads. The buyer is comparison shopping and picks based on proof of quality plus who calls back first.
* **Recurring maintenance** needs volume and retention more than persuasion. The margin is in keeping an account for three seasons, not winning the first mow at a discount.
* **Referral-driven work**, common to both, rides almost entirely on how the last job looked and how fast you responded when a neighbor asked for your number.

Mixing these into one campaign usually dilutes design/build ads with mowing inquiries, or has the maintenance funnel paying design/build cost-per-lead for a \$150-a-month account.

## Does before-and-after creative actually matter more here?

Yes, more than almost any other home service category. Landscaping is visual by nature, and a homeowner comparing quotes is making a gut call on whether your work looks like their yard. Text-only ad copy competes badly against real before-and-after pairs.

Creative that tends to perform:

* Before-and-after photo pairs of the same yard, same angle, ideally within 24 hours of completion
* Short video walkthroughs of a finished project, even shot on a phone
* Drone or elevated shots of hardscape and larger installs, where scale is part of the sell
* Seasonal transformation sets (spring cleanup, fall leaf removal) showing the same property over time

BrightLocal's consumer research finds that most people check reviews before choosing a local business, and for landscaping, photos function almost like reviews. A five-star rating with no visible work is a weaker signal than a three-photo before-and-after with a modest star count.

## Which lead channels actually book jobs?

|                       | Local search (GBP + Google Ads)  | Meta ads with before/after creative       | Referrals                           | AI-operator response (Ares)      |
| --------------------- | -------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------- | -------------------------------- |
| Best for              | Design/build, "near me" searches | Awareness and visual proof, both segments | Existing clients, recurring revenue | Whatever channel brings the lead |
| Seasonality           | Spikes spring and fall           | Can run reduced off-season for brand      | Steady, slower to build             | Year-round                       |
| Typical cost          | Often \$20-60 per lead           | Often \$15-40 per lead                    | Low cash cost, high time cost       | \$299/month flat                 |
| Response speed needed | High                             | Medium                                    | Low, already warm                   | Seconds, built in                |
| Visual proof needed   | Some (GBP photos)                | Essential                                 | Word of mouth substitutes           | N/A                              |

No single row wins on its own. Most landscaping companies that scale use local search and Meta together, feeding one lead response system instead of two separate inboxes.

## How much does response speed actually matter?

More than most owners assume, and it compounds every other lever here. A Harvard Business Review study by Oldroyd and McElheran found companies contacting a lead within an hour were roughly seven times more likely to have a meaningful conversation than those that waited even a little longer. Landscaping leads are price-comparison-heavy: the homeowner filing three quote requests in one afternoon hires whoever calls back first with a real answer.

This is also where maintenance revenue gets protected or lost. Bain's research, associated with Fred Reichheld, shows a 5% increase in retention can raise profits substantially, often 25% to 95%. A client who waits two days for a reply is a client a competitor is about to pick up.

## A hypothetical example: a two-crew landscaping company

This is an illustrative walkthrough, not a claimed Ares client outcome. Say a two-crew company runs \$1,500 a month on Meta ads year-round with generic "quality landscaping services" copy, no real job photos, aimed at a metro of 400,000 people. Leads trickle in slowly, mostly price-shoppers, and half never get a callback before next day.

Shift that budget toward before-and-after creative from the last ten jobs, target the three ZIP codes where those jobs sit, and ramp spend ahead of spring instead of running flat: lead quality and neighborhood recognition both improve before a single extra dollar is spent. Instant lead response closes the loop the ad spend already paid for.

## How Ares fits into a landscaping lead strategy

Ares is an AI operator for home service businesses, running on GoHighLevel with a Meta ads connector and Google Ads support. It manages your Google Business Profile and automates review requests, useful where photo-backed reviews carry weight. On any lead, Ares responds by SMS, email, or chat within seconds, qualifies it, books the estimate, and follows up if it goes quiet, escalating to a human when judgment is needed. Multi-location operators get one fleet dashboard instead of a report per crew, and every automated action respects owner-approval gates, including before ad spend goes live. Ares is text-first: it does not answer phone calls. Pricing is \$299 a month standard, \$100 per seat for enterprise, no setup fee.

On the roadmap, not live yet: call tracking, voice answering, Google Local Services Ads management, and field-service integrations.

Where Ares doesn't fit: a business running almost entirely on inbound calls, or one needing a strategist to redesign pricing, still needs a person for that. See [lead follow-up](/leads/follow-up) and [the ads connector](/ads/campaigns). Against a full agency retainer, [this comparison](/guides/should-i-fire-my-agency-use-ai) covers the tradeoff.

## Frequently asked questions

<AccordionGroup>
  <Accordion title="What's the best way to get landscaping leads in the off-season?">
    Shift spend toward brand-building creative and maintenance-contract renewals instead of running the same design/build campaign through winter. Off-season is the cheapest time to build a before-and-after photo library for next season.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="How much should a landscaping lead cost?">
    There's no single number: local search leads for design/build often run \$20-60 in many markets, Meta leads with strong creative often run \$15-40. What you can afford depends on your job value and close rate.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Do I need different marketing for maintenance vs. design/build?">
    Generally yes. Design/build buyers compare quotes on visible quality and fast callbacks. Maintenance buyers care more about reliability, and lead economics work differently since value is spread across a season, not one job.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="What is neighborhood clustering and does it really help?">
    Concentrating ad spend and creative on a small number of streets or ZIP codes where you already have finished work, rather than an entire metro. It tends to lower cost per lead since the proof is local, and it makes crew scheduling easier.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="Does Ares work specifically for landscaping companies?">
    Ares is built for home service businesses generally, including landscaping, running on GoHighLevel with a Meta and Google Ads connector, GBP management, and instant SMS/email/chat response. It's text-first and does not answer phone calls.
  </Accordion>

  <Accordion title="How fast do I need to respond to a landscaping lead to book the job?">
    As close to instant as possible. The HBR study by Oldroyd and McElheran found contacting a lead within an hour made a company roughly seven times more likely to have a meaningful conversation than waiting even a little longer, and landscaping buyers often request several quotes the same day.
  </Accordion>
</AccordionGroup>
