Landscaping is seasonal. Spring explodes. Summer is steady. Fall is busy. Winter is dead.
Most landscaping companies panic during winter and hope for spring.
Smart ones market year-round.
Here’s how landscaping companies generate 100+ jobs per year in 2026.
The Landscaping Marketing Reality
Where landscaping customers come from:
- 40% Google search
- 25% Google Ads (immediate)
- 20% Referrals
- 10% Google Business Profile
- 5% Other
75% come from Google. If you’re not visible there, you’re losing 3 of 4 customers.
Strategy 1: Google Ads Year-Round
Google Ads is your anchor channel.
Keywords to target:
- Local + service: “landscaping near me”, “lawn care [city]”
- Problem-based: “overgrown yard”, “lawn maintenance”
- Seasonal: “spring cleanup”, “fall cleanup”, “snow removal”
- Specific service: “sod installation”, “retaining wall”, “garden design”
2026 benchmarks:
- CPC: $8-15
- CPA (leads): $20-50
- Cost per job: $80-200
- Conversion rate: 20-30%
Example budget:
- Daily budget: $150
- Clicks per day: 12
- Leads: 2-3 per day
- Monthly leads: 60-90
- Jobs per month: 15-22
- Monthly revenue: $4,500-13,200
- Monthly spend: $4,500
- ROI: 1-3x immediately, 5-10x with repeat
Strategy 2: Seasonal Campaigns
Landscaping has predictable seasons. Adjust budget accordingly.
Spring (Feb-Apr):
- Keywords: spring cleanup, yard cleanup
- Budget: 1.5x normal (high demand)
Summer (May-Aug):
- Keywords: lawn maintenance, landscape design
- Budget: 1x (steady)
Fall (Sep-Nov):
- Keywords: fall cleanup, leaf removal
- Budget: 1.2x (busy)
Winter (Dec-Jan):
- Keywords: snow removal, spring planning
- Budget: 1.2x (snow removal premium)
This captures seasonal peaks and keeps revenue consistent.
Strategy 3: Local SEO and Google Business Profile
Your GBP is critical.
Optimization:
- Claim and verify GBP
- Add all service areas
- Upload 30+ before/after photos
- Post 2-3 times per week
- Get systematic reviews (after every job)
- Respond to all reviews within 24 hours
- Keep info updated
Expected: 20-40 leads per month from maps
Strategy 4: Before/After Portfolio
Landscaping is visual.
What to do:
- Photograph every job (start and finish)
- Tag location
- Include on website
- Use in ads (before/after converts 2-3x better)
- Post on social regularly
Before/after content shows quality, builds credibility, differentiates you.
Strategy 5: Referral Program
Landscaping customers refer naturally.
Program:
- $300-500 per referral
- $500-750 if monthly maintenance customer
- Unlimited referrals
Why it works: Customers see results. Want to share. Close rate: 40-50%.
Target: 5-10 referrals per month = 2-4 extra jobs
Strategy 6: Email for Off-Season
During slow months, stay in touch.
Email strategy:
- Monthly maintenance reminder
- Seasonal offer
- Project showcase (before/afters)
- Early booking incentive
This keeps you top-of-mind and books projects in advance.
Complete Marketing Budget
For $100K annual revenue:
| Channel | Annual Budget | Jobs | Cost Per Job |
|---|---|---|---|
| Google Ads | $40,000 | 80 | $500 |
| Local SEO | $3,000 | 30 | $100 |
| GBP | Free | 20 | $0 |
| Referrals | $5,000 | 30 | $167 |
| Total | $48,000 | 160 | $300 |
Expected revenue: 160 jobs × $600 = $96,000 Profit after marketing: $48,000 (50% margin)
Seasonal Action Plan
Jan (Winter): Snow removal ads Feb-Apr (Spring): Spring cleanup (1.5x budget) May-Aug (Summer): Maintenance (standard budget) Sep-Nov (Fall): Fall cleanup (1.2x budget) Dec: Spring bookings early
Common Mistakes
- Only marketing in peak season
- No before/after photos
- Not asking for referrals
- Weak website
- Ignoring Google Business Profile
Your Next Steps
This month:
- Launch Google Ads ($150/day)
- Optimize Google Business Profile
- Photograph next 5 jobs
Next month: 4. Seasonal keyword strategy 5. Referral program 6. Email follow-up
By month 3:
- 60+ leads per month
- 15-20 jobs
- Year-round pipeline
Landscaping companies that market year-round book 2-3x more jobs.
Want to see what marketing your top competitors are using? We’ll break down their Google Ads, referral, and seasonal strategy. Free competitor analysis.