Finished job photos that win calls
Use these four shots and a short story to make your next job easy to say yes to.
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18 guides match — page 1 of 2.
Use these four shots and a short story to make your next job easy to say yes to.
A practical guide to explaining home service pricing online with honest ranges, diagnostic fee language, cost factors, inclusions, exclusions, and clear next steps.
Place review snippets where they support a claim, preserve the original meaning, and add the context the quote cannot supply.
Use a small freshness checklist to keep review activity current instead of letting the profile drift into history.
Read the review stream as a pattern log and bucket the last 20 reviews into strengths, gaps, and recurring phrases.
Build a simple review process with one trigger, one owner, one channel, one log, and one follow-up step the team can actually keep doing.
Use short public replies to thank good reviews, acknowledge bad ones, and report policy violations without starting a fight.
A simple, low-pressure review request works best when the ask is routine: after the job is complete, use the same script every time, and make the link or QR code easy to use.
Customer reviews can become case studies, social posts, website proof, and Google Business Profile updates when they are handled honestly. This guide shows home service teams how to transform real customer language into useful content without inventing proof or exposing customer details.
A practical structure and pre-publish checklist for contractor service pages, with common mistakes to avoid and a worked example for adapting to any trade.
How to write contractor service-area sections that help homeowners and search engines without creating thin copy-paste city pages that risk penalties or look generic.
Honest pricing copy for contractor service pages: explain what affects cost, describe the quote process plainly, and help homeowners decide between repair and replacement.