New Garden maintenance business

Andy ipswich

Free Member
Jun 22, 2018
2
1
Hi all, I'm in the planning stages of starting my own gardening business. I can get hold of all the equipment I need etc but I need some advice on marketing and prices. This is the first business I have ever started.

So firstly what's the best form of advertising a business like this?

Should I charge by the hour or price up the jobs as they are?

How much would you charge hourly?
How much would you charge for a day? And how much for just a lawn and tidy up?

Thanks in advance for any advice you can give me guys and girls.

Andy
 

estwig

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Sep 29, 2006
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Your rates are up to you, people want a quote, not an hourly rate.

Marketing via fb groups, and a very simple website setup to make the most of google my business will bring great results. Business cards are a must and leaflets to drop through the houses of neighbours, next door to where you are working will bring great results. Everyone wants the local guy for this type of work.
None of this has to be fancy or cost a lot, nobody expects a gardener to have a slick website and fancy business cards.

Don't suppose you're anywhere near Gillingham in Kent, come and do mine?
 
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Andy ipswich

Free Member
Jun 22, 2018
2
1
Your rates are up to you, people want a quote, not an hourly rate.

Marketing via fb groups, and a very simple website setup to make the most of google my business will bring great results. Business cards are a must and leaflets to drop through the houses of neighbours, next door to where you are working will bring great results. Everyone wants the local guy for this type of work.
None of this has to be fancy or cost a lot, nobody expects a gardener to have a slick website and fancy business cards.

Don't suppose you're anywhere near Gillingham in Kent, come and do mine?

Sorry I'm afraid I'm in Ipswich so probably a bit further than I should travel for this kind of work but appreciate the offer. Thanks for the advice on advertising!!!
 
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Clearaccy

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Apr 11, 2017
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I would definitely start advertising on Facebook/Twitter as most people now use Social Media!

In terms of pricing you could check what other people are charging in your area. You could charge by hour but you would need to estimate how long the job is going to take which is very hard in some cases.
 
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Calvin Crane

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Jun 8, 2018
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I took a local taxi firm who came to me with just a facebook page. We started running google ads which for what you are doing are much better than social media. When people need something they go to google. I just checked and google recieve around 70 searches per month for the keyword 'gardening service ipswich' that is a single phrase so there is demand for this.
I also can tell you that each click was 37p low and 1.11 high, so eventually your clicks will cost that amount. Back to the taxi business we couldn't get our ads high enough because they had no website. I got them to buy a website from me for 300 pounds and told them it was a good investment. Not to mention any joker can put up a facebook page where is the trust 2pm at night are you trusting this taxi firm? NO.
So also the website was SEO'd by myself and it now ranks so high they no longer advertise at all. Until the website was working we did limited ads and the cost per click was dramatically lower going to the relevant pages on their new website. They also show up in the local searches.
For you local searches will be 'gardeners near me' So you need to do your google my business profile.
You will need to do traditional marketing for sure drop cards and leaflets locally but google is great value when you do it right. Good Luck.PM me if you need specific help I don't want to abuse the forum.
 
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Hi Andy, welcome to the forum.

I second everything that Calvin has expertly laid out for you. So definitely do everything he said, it will really help.

With every new customer, get them to review your business on the website where they found you. This will be so valuable when you're first starting out, as no one really knows if they should trust you or not. So reading that other people have received a great service is like gold dust.

For repeat business, give them a card with your details on which also states that they will receive a discount if contacting you again.

I'd like to throw my hat in the ring and say that you can use me for all of your marketing needs if you'd like another quote.
 
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estwig

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Sep 29, 2006
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With every new customer, get them to review your business on the website where they found you.
Set up a review system on your own website, what's the point of that, no one will trust it!

For repeat business, give them a card with your details on which also states that they will receive a discount if contacting you again.
Why would you discount someone who, assuming you've done a good job, is already going to be a repeat customer!

I'd like to throw my hat in the ring and say that you can use me for all of your marketing needs if you'd like another quote.
Another quote for what!
 
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pelparc

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Apr 10, 2017
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Website first. Doesn't have to be fantastic. Have photos of your work plus helpful information on it such as times of the year to plant/do stuff would be good as that sort of thing would show you know what your gardening stuff. As Calvin says when people want something they google it. That's how we found our gardeners. What type of people use gardeners? Old, sick/disabled, busy? Do they have any support or social groups you could advertise, talk, meet etc.? There are the trade directories such as mybuilder who have a gardening section.
 
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ethical PR

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  • Apr 20, 2009
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    I took a local taxi firm who came to me with just a facebook page. We started running google ads which for what you are doing are much better than social media. When people need something they go to google. I just checked and google recieve around 70 searches per month for the keyword 'gardening service ipswich' that is a single phrase so there is demand for this.
    I also can tell you that each click was 37p low and 1.11 high, so eventually your clicks will cost that amount. Back to the taxi business we couldn't get our ads high enough because they had no website. I got them to buy a website from me for 300 pounds and told them it was a good investment. Not to mention any joker can put up a facebook page where is the trust 2pm at night are you trusting this taxi firm? NO.
    So also the website was SEO'd by myself and it now ranks so high they no longer advertise at all. Until the website was working we did limited ads and the cost per click was dramatically lower going to the relevant pages on their new website. They also show up in the local searches.
    For you local searches will be 'gardeners near me' So you need to do your google my business profile.
    You will need to do traditional marketing for sure drop cards and leaflets locally but google is great value when you do it right. Good Luck.PM me if you need specific help I don't want to abuse the forum.

    Sorry I can't agree with all the advice here @Calvin Crane . This sounds like the focus of your post is about promoting what you can offer, rather than giving the OP meaningful advice based on his needs.

    @Andy ipswich

    I would focus on:

    1. Doing your market research. Who are your competitors, what do they offer, what do they charge, what can you do that's different/better

    2. Develop your costing model, most people want a project rate, to estimate this you need to identify what hourly rate you want to charge to cover your costs and give you the profit you need to make your business viable. Remember you won't be working seven days a week, so base your rate on you say working chargeable hours on a three day week. Work up a budget decide whether once you have your start up costs and your daily rate whether you can make enough profit to have a viable business.

    3. Getting some great before and after shots of your work - do it for family and friends to build a portfolio and client references

    4. Set up a FB business page - post regular interesting content, images of your work, client reviews, seasonal gardening tips etc I disagree that people don't trust FB pages. It's as easy to put a website (almost) as it is to put a FB page.

    6. Get your flyers and cards done and deliver the flyers by hand and pay to get them up in newsagents. Local at placing an ad in your local school newsletters. Set your business up on Google. Encourage clients to leave you reviews. Thank them with a lovely plant.

    7. If you are good at what you do, you will build up referrals, Ask clients if you can keep in touch to give you a database of people who are willing to hear from you. You can then send out a newsletter with special offers and seasonal gardening advice.

    8. When you have your business up and running you can look at developing your website. Yes people do use Google but they can find you through your Google business listing and reviews, you don't need a website straight away from day one. If you want one you can set up a simple site using Wordpress and use one of its SEO plug ins.

    You don't need to pay someone to set up a website for you and you don't need to pay someone for local SEO - it's easy to rank for local searches. If you are going to use someone, talk to someone like @Fiscix who is a long standing member who knows his stuff when it comes to building and optimising websites.

    Remember only invest in communications that you will keep up to date. Having out of date content or not posting regularly makes it look like you don't care about communicating with your customers.
     
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    Awinner2

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    Aug 4, 2017
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    Set up Google My Business (FREE) (google search for this) You can make a free website with no domain name or hosting costs again using google my business, In my opinion people do not search Facebook for services although FB loves to take your money for advertising. This way you can show up in the searches especially relevant when people search from their mobiles. (Now generating over 60% of all search traffic). I have just checked on "garden maintenance Ipswich" and there are not many showing up and the majority are poorly optimised. Do this right and you will attract many clients.
     
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    ethical PR

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  • Apr 20, 2009
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    [QUOTE="Awinner2, post: 2858104, member: 294654" In my opinion people do not search Facebook for services although FB loves to take your money for advertising.[/QUOTE]

    No-one or least I'm not suggesting the OP advertises on Facebook. I suggested they set up a FB business page and become active on local area groups. There are five where I live each averaging 3000 plus. Every day people ask for recommendations on plumbers, builders, landscapers, gardeners, restaurants, dentists, child minders etc.

    So I disagree with @Awinner2 people do use FB to find services just not through their ads.

    Referrals are the way to go for a business like this either through family and friends of clients or through recommendations on local area groups (on social media or online).
     
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    Mitch3473

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    Aug 25, 2011
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    Go for it....our gardener has just recruited another woman to help her do ours. Funny thing is, she already works for us....

    Leaflet drop along the road you're working, deliver them yourself if you're not mowing anything or do a deal with an Avon rep or similar. Post office/shop windows, public notice boards. "A" board outside the property, sign written van, logoed workwear, be punctual or let your client know, don't be afraid to charge more than the competition.
     
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    Alan

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  • Aug 16, 2011
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    So firstly what's the best form of advertising a business like this?

    No doubt, word of mouth. The problem though is getting your first few customers, and for that you will have to pay for advertising, and in 2008 that means mainly online ( Google or Facebook ) although local parish mags / notice boards / leaflet drops also can work for gardening.


    Should I charge by the hour or price up the jobs as they are?

    Every domestic gardener I have known charges by the hour. Landscapers and garden designers charge by the job. Assuming you want regular customers and you are just going to go back every two weeks etc as a gardener, then I suggest per hour. Of course your plan may be different.

    How much would you charge hourly?

    How much would I charge maybe £150 per hour - but then I don't want to do it. Gardeners around my way charge £20-£25 per hour although th
    ere are some retired hobbyist that charge £10-12/hour

    Hope that helps
     
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    Set up a facebook account and market to local facebook groups - take before and after pics and videos of you work with how much it cost.

    I saw guys doing this and a mate of mine built a solid customer base of regulars and one offs in a few months.
     
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    aaron web designer

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    May 11, 2016
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    Not just facebook, instagram is good too. If you trying to find business local then yes a facebook page is needed and a website. Defiantely Google business page and name it as something like 'garden maintenance Ipswich'.

    DEFINATELY go for a featured listing on Gumtree as it works well for your business sector. Yell is OK but it depends on what sort of advertising your going for and the area/sector (I worked at Yell so ask me before doing anything with them).
     
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