Generic AI Copy Is Cheap. Real Proof Is Not.
AI can generate polished words quickly. Home service marketing still needs real proof before the content can build trust.
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AI can generate polished words quickly. Home service marketing still needs real proof before the content can build trust.
Proof is not a louder claim. It is specific evidence from real work: the problem, diagnosis, process, finished result, customer question, review theme, or whether the work is approved to share publicly — anything that helps a homeowner understand why the work is credible.
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.
Use short public replies to thank good reviews, acknowledge bad ones, and report policy violations without starting a fight.
Use a simple format map to match each idea to the right Instagram or Facebook post type before you write the caption.
Turn praise-only captions into proof stories by naming the job, the change, and the lesson.
A strong caption starts with what the homeowner noticed, explains what the crew found or did, shows what changed, and ends with the next step.
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.
Where reviews, mini case studies, photos, and related content belong on a contractor service page, and how to use proof to support the page's specific promise.
What the top of a home service page should do: name the homeowner's problem, write a clear H1, and put one useful action and one true trust cue above the fold.