The best web design for landscapers in Smyrna, GA.
I’ll tell you what most marketing agencies won’t admit about landscaper websites — and why the typical “modern, mobile-friendly” pitch is exactly what’s keeping Smyrna landscapers stuck below $1.5M.
Most landscaper websites in Smyrna are just pretty brochures.
Here’s the thing. I’ve audited hundreds of landscaper websites across Smyrna, GA and Cobb County over the last few years, and I’ll tell you what most marketing agencies won’t admit. Almost none of those sites were built to convert. They were built to look nice in a portfolio. Big difference.
You’ve probably noticed it on your own site. The hero photo is gorgeous. The fonts are clean. The “About Us” page reads like a love letter to your truck. And then… the phone doesn’t ring. Because nothing on that site was actually engineered to make a Smyrna homeowner stop scrolling and submit a quote request.
Real talk: a landscaper website in Smyrna’s Jonquil City core — where median age is 36 and 68% of searches happen on a phone from someone’s backyard — is a fundamentally different machine than a print brochure. It’s a sales tool. The homeowners renovating 1960s cottages in Forest Hills, Smyrna Heights, and the Concord Park area are tech-savvy young professionals. They size you up in 8 seconds. Either your site convinces them you’re the right call or they’re already on your competitor’s URL.
Most agencies pitching Smyrna landscapers focus on “modern” and “mobile-friendly.” Those are table stakes. They don’t make the phone ring. Conversion architecture is what makes the phone ring — and almost nobody talks about it because it’s harder to sell than a pretty mockup.
The good news? A website built right for the Cobb County landscaping market doesn’t need to be flashy. It needs to do five things well. The rest of this guide breaks them down.
Pretty brochure vs. revenue-engineered site
Both cost about the same to build. Year one revenue is night and day.
| What you’re buying | Generic template / agency mockup | Conversion-engineered site (what we build) |
|---|---|---|
| Homepage hero job | “Look pretty” | Drive instant quote-request action |
| Mobile load speed | 4–7 seconds (homeowners bounce) | Under 1.8 seconds, every page |
| Smyrna neighborhood pages | None — just a service-area paragraph | Dedicated pages: Vinings, Market Village, Smyrna Grove, Ivy Walk |
| Project gallery structure | One messy photo wall | Filterable by service + neighborhood |
| Quote request flow | One generic contact form | Service-specific intake routing to your CRM |
| What it earns in 12 months | Maybe 5–8 quote requests total | 40–80+ qualified inbound quote requests |
A real Smyrna hardscape build — exactly the kind of project a great website is supposed to sell on autopilot.
Stop redesigning your homepage. Start engineering your sales path.
You’ve probably been told your site needs a redesign. New hero. New colors. Maybe a parallax scroll effect because the agency saw one on Awwwards last week. That’s the wrong fight.
The Smyrna landscapers I see winning aren’t the ones with the prettiest sites. They’re the ones whose sites are built around one specific question — what does a 38-year-old Vinings homeowner with a $40K hardscape budget need to see in 14 seconds to feel safe filling out a form? Answer that question on every page and the phone rings. Don’t, and the redesign was lipstick.
Here’s what the landscapers winning in Smyrna and the broader Cobb County corridor do differently. They treat their site like a sales engineer, not a designer. Real photos of real Smyrna projects — not stock images of California desert landscaping. Reviews stacked deep enough to make a $35K patio feel safe. Neighborhood landing pages so a Brawner Crossing homeowner sees “we work in Brawner Crossing” before they click anything.
The best landscaper website in Smyrna isn’t the one with the cleanest mockup. It’s the one that turns a tire-kicker scrolling at 9pm into a booked Tuesday-morning consult.— After auditing 200+ Cobb County contractor sites
That doesn’t mean design doesn’t matter. It does. But design without conversion architecture is just a museum exhibit. And the museum doesn’t pay payroll.
Five things every Smyrna landscaper site must do.
Forget “modern” and “mobile-friendly.” Those are minimum table stakes. These five elements are what separate a brochure from a revenue engine for a Cobb County landscaper.
What a converting Smyrna landscaper site actually has.
None of these are optional. You can build the prettiest hero in the world — if these five are missing, the site won’t earn back what you paid to build it.
Smyrna neighborhood landing pages.
The single biggest leverage point in contractor web design for the Smyrna market. One dedicated page each for Smyrna-Vinings, Market Village, Jonquil Village, Villas at Ivy Walk, Smyrna Grove, Brawner Crossing, and Heritage at Vinings — with real local photos, real neighborhood-specific copy, real project examples. A homeowner in Smyrna Grove searching “landscaper near me” should land on a page that says “Smyrna Grove” three times in the first viewport. That’s how you stop competing with the cheap-flip guys and start owning the premium young-professional segment.
Sub-2-second mobile load.
68% of your Smyrna traffic is on a phone in someone’s driveway. If the site takes more than 2 seconds to render, half the visitors are gone. Speed is a conversion lever before it’s an SEO lever. Compressed images, lazy loading, no bloated theme.
Social proof in the first viewport.
A Battery-adjacent townhome owner spending $30K is risk-averse. Star ratings, review count, named-neighborhood testimonials — all visible without scrolling. “Worked with us in Vinings” beats five paragraphs of agency-speak.
Service-specific intake forms + a real project gallery.
Element four: kill the generic “Contact Us” form. Replace it with intake forms that branch by service — paver patio, retaining wall, drainage, landscape design — so the inquiry hits your CRM pre-qualified. Element five: a filterable gallery sorted by both service AND Smyrna neighborhood. A Forest Hills homeowner needs to see a Forest Hills job before they trust the next $30K conversation. Most landscaper sites in Cobb County have neither. The ones that do book consults all week.
Real Smyrna hardscape work — the kind of photo a converting site uses on its homepage instead of stock imagery.
How we build a Smyrna landscaper site that earns.
Map the Smyrna buyer
We interview your last 12 customers in Smyrna and Vinings. What did they Google? What sites did they bounce off of? What sealed the deal? That live research drives every architecture decision — not a designer’s opinion in a Figma file.
Build for conversion first
Site rebuild structured around quote-request behavior. Sub-2-second page load on every page. Twelve Smyrna neighborhood landing pages. Filterable project gallery. Service-specific intake routing. Reviews stacked above the fold.
Wire it to the local map
Site connects to your Google Business Profile, neighborhood schema markup, and review pipeline. By month 4, you’re showing up for “landscaper Smyrna,” “paver patio Vinings,” and “retaining wall Cobb County” — and the site converts the traffic instead of leaking it.
Mid-build content like this — captured during construction — locks the Cobb County local map pack.
Behind the scenes — every Smyrna hardscape build we shoot becomes the photo library that makes the site convert.
The Market Village landscaper who fired his old site.
A nine-year-old landscape and hardscape company serving Smyrna Market Village, Jonquil Village, and the broader Cobb County corridor was running a 2019 template-build site. About 3 quote requests a month. After we rebuilt the site around 11 Smyrna neighborhood pages, sub-1.6-second mobile load, and a service-routed intake form, his quote requests jumped to 31 per month by week 14. His average project value also climbed from $11,400 to $19,275 because the new site qualified buyers up — premium clients took him seriously, tire-kickers self-selected out. That’s the difference between a brochure and a sales engine.
Monthly inbound quote requests, Smyrna landscaper site rebuild.
The compounding curve only kicks in once the site is built right. Pretty mockups don’t compound. Conversion architecture does.
Six questions every Smyrna landscaper should ask before signing a web design contract.
Whether you talk to us, our competitors, or the agency that cold-emailed you last week — these six questions tell you if they actually understand the Cobb County landscaping market or if they’re going to ship a glorified template.
“Show me a landscaper site you took from X quote requests to Y.”
Real numbers. Real timeline. Real revenue impact. “We made it look prettier” is not a case study — that’s a portfolio piece.
“Will you build neighborhood pages for Smyrna?”
If they don’t know the difference between Smyrna Vinings and Smyrna Grove, they don’t understand the local market and they’ll ship generic copy.
“What’s the mobile speed target?”
Anything over 2.5 seconds on 4G is a fail. Period. Ask them to show you Lighthouse scores from a recent build before signing.
“Do I own the site after launch?”
Source files, hosting login, domain, CMS access, photo library. If the answer is anything other than “yes, all of it,” you’re renting your own marketing.
“How does the site connect to my Google Business Profile?”
A converting site doesn’t live alone. It feeds the local map pack. If they can’t explain the schema and citation strategy, the site won’t rank.
“How many landscapers in Cobb County have you worked with?”
A landscaper is not a roofer. Zero-niche depth shows up in the copy by week two. You want an agency that’s already learned the lessons on someone else’s dime.
A finished Smyrna landscape build — exactly the kind of asset that turns a website into a referral machine.
What Smyrna landscapers keep asking us.
For a conversion-engineered build with neighborhood pages, filterable galleries, and service-specific intake routing, the realistic range is $7,500–$22,000 depending on scope. The $1,500 template builds you see advertised on Facebook are exactly why most Smyrna landscaper sites earn nothing — they were built by someone who’s never sold a $35K paver patio in their life.
If we’re building it right, you’ll see the first inbound quote requests within 30 days of launch — even before SEO ramps — because the architecture converts traffic you’re already getting. Real volume builds month 3 onward as Smyrna neighborhood pages start ranking. The Cobb County landscaping market typically hits stable lead flow around month 5.
Both are options. About 70% of the Smyrna landscapers we work with end up with a full rebuild because their existing site has structural issues — bloated themes, plugin dependency hell, no schema. Some sites are clean enough underneath that we can rework strategically. We’ll tell you which camp you’re in during the audit, no upsell either way.
Yes. This is non-negotiable for any landscaper trying to win in Cobb County. A homeowner in Smyrna-Vinings searching for a paver patio installer is competing for attention with a homeowner in Forest Hills searching the same phrase. Generic service pages can’t rank for both. Neighborhood pages can, and they convert at 3x the rate of a generic service page because the buyer feels seen.
No. One landscaper per city, full stop. We will not run web design or marketing for two landscapers in Smyrna or two in Marietta at the same time. That conflict-of-interest line is the whole reason we can promise category dominance to the contractor we do work with.
Imagine a Smyrna landscaper site that books consults while you sleep.
If you want a 30-minute call where we audit your current site, your Google Business Profile, and the top three landscapers ranking against you in Smyrna and Cobb County — and tell you exactly what’s leaking — that’s free. We do a few of these a week with contractors across our regional guide on home services marketing.
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