Most contractor marketing advice is a list of tactics with no order, which is why so many trade owners end up paying for a logo, a few boosted posts, and a lead subscription, then wonder why the phone is quiet. Marketing is not a pile of tactics. It is a stack, built in sequence, where each layer makes the next one work harder. Get the order right and a one-person crew can outrank a regional competitor. Get it wrong and no budget saves you. This is the playbook, in order.
The opportunity is not subtle. The U.S. home services market reached roughly 90 billion dollars in 2024, over 97 percent of homeowners use Google to find local home services, and about 82 percent treat Google reviews as essential when choosing a contractor (Hook Agency). The customers are already searching. The job is to be the obvious answer when they do.
Why most contractor marketing budgets leak
The common failure is renting instead of owning. Trade owners buy shared leads, boost a few posts, and treat marketing as an expense that stops the day the invoice does. The fix is to treat marketing as an asset. A Google Business Profile, a ranking website, and a base of reviews keep producing long after the work to build them is finished. We saw this directly with a masonry and stucco contractor we work with: an owned Google Business Profile drove 17 phone calls and 93 profile interactions over six months, all exclusively theirs, with a small ads test adding 10 more inquiries at a 10.75 percent click-through rate. No per-lead invoice, and the asset keeps working.
The contractor marketing stack, built in order
You do not need every layer on day one. You need them in the right sequence, foundation first. Skip the base and the paid layers just rent you traffic that never compounds.
1. Google Business Profile and local SEO (the foundation)
When someone searches a trade plus near me, Google shows three local businesses in a map pack above the regular results. Ranking there is the highest-leverage move in contractor marketing, and it is driven by your profile, your proximity, your reviews, and the local signals on your site. This is the base layer because every other channel performs better once it is in place. Start with our local SEO work if you do nothing else.
2. A website built to convert
Your website is the salesperson that works while you are on a roof or pouring a slab. It needs fast load times, a clear phone number, real project photos, and a dedicated page for each service and service area you cover. Those pages are what let you rank for the specific searches buyers type, and they turn anonymous clicks into booked estimates.
3. Reviews as a ranking and trust engine
Reviews lift your local ranking and close the sale before you answer the phone. With 82 percent of homeowners treating Google reviews as essential, a simple habit of asking after every completed job outperforms any one-time push (Hook Agency).
4. Paid search and Local Services Ads
Organic rankings and reviews compound over months. Paid search captures the homeowner who needs you this week, and Local Services Ads put you at the top with a Google Guaranteed badge on a pay-per-lead basis. Use ads to fund jobs while your owned channels mature, then taper as organic carries the load.
5. AI search visibility
This is the new front, and it is moving fast. About 45 percent of consumers now use AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity to find local business recommendations, up from just 6 percent a year earlier (BrightLocal). AI assistants name only a few businesses per answer and draw on structured, well-reviewed web presences, so the contractors who set this up now are buying cheap first-mover insurance.
Marketing by trade: where the playbook bends
The stack is the same for every trade, but the emphasis shifts with how homeowners shop. Roofing is high-volume and storm-driven, so speed and reviews matter most. Masonry and concrete are lower-volume, higher-consideration, so project photos and trust signals do the heavy lifting. Here is how the playbook maps to the trades we focus on.
We map your Google Business Profile, reviews, website, and AI-search visibility against the contractors ranking above you, then show you the fastest path to an owned pipeline. No shared lead lists involved.
How long until contractor marketing works?
Paid ads can produce calls within days. Owned channels build over two to four months and then keep paying off. A realistic path for a contractor starting near scratch is setup in the first weeks, paid capture booking early jobs by week six, local rankings and reviews climbing through months two to four, and an organic pipeline that lowers cost per job from there. The contractors who quit at week three are the ones who never reach the compounding part.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best marketing for contractors?
The best contractor marketing is an owned stack built in order: a Google Business Profile and local SEO first, then a converting website, a review habit, paid ads to capture immediate demand, and AI-search visibility. Owned channels produce exclusive inquiries and lower your cost per job over time, unlike rented lead lists.
How much should a contractor spend on marketing?
Most contractors spend 5 to 10 percent of revenue, but the right number depends on your stage and goals. See our full guide to how much contractor marketing costs for budgets, channel prices, and the cost-per-job math.
Is SEO or paid advertising better for contractors?
They do different jobs. Paid ads and Local Services Ads capture homeowners who need you this week, so they work fast. SEO and reviews compound over months and lower your cost per job. Most contractors should run ads to fund early work while building organic presence in parallel. Our full guide to SEO for contractors covers the organic side step by step.
Does my contracting business need to worry about AI search?
Increasingly, yes. About 45 percent of consumers now use AI tools to find local businesses, up from 6 percent a year earlier. AI assistants name only a few businesses per answer, so setting up structured, well-reviewed visibility now positions you ahead of competitors who wait.
How long does contractor marketing take to work?
Paid ads can generate calls within days. Local rankings, reviews, and AI visibility typically build over two to four months and then keep producing, which is why an owned pipeline gets cheaper per job the longer you run it.
Sources
Every stat and authoritative claim in this post cites a primary or industry source. Open any link to verify.