The Cumming landscaper SEO playbook — invisible to page one in 90 days.
If your landscaping crew can build a perfect paver patio but your phone only rings when a neighbor refers you — this is the SEO playbook that flips that ratio in a quarter.
Why most Cumming landscapers are invisible on Google.
A landscaper on Bethelview Road and a landscaper on Matt Highway. Same service area. Same quality of work. One averages 17 inbound calls a week from Google. The other averages 4. The SEO gap is the only variable that matters.
Here’s the thing. Most landscapers we talk to around Cumming and South Forsyth have been told SEO is a 12-month grind, a “long-term play,” something that maybe pays off by year two if the agency doesn’t ghost them first. Real talk: that timeline isn’t true for a local service business in a defined geo like Forsyth County. It’s a story national agencies tell because they don’t actually understand local search.
You’ve probably noticed the same landscapers keep showing up at the top of every Google search you run. It isn’t because they’re paying more — most of them aren’t running ads at all. They built three or four pieces of digital infrastructure most landscapers in Forsyth County never touch, and now they own the top of the funnel for the entire county.
The good news? That infrastructure isn’t complicated. It isn’t expensive. And it isn’t a 12-month project. Forsyth County adds thousands of new homeowner households every year — each one a first-time landscaping client searching online — and the landscapers who invest in SEO now own those searches before competitors catch on.
The landscapers winning Cumming’s local search results right now aren’t smarter, faster, or better-funded than you. They’re just running a tighter SEO playbook. Same playbook, every time. You can run the same one.
Let me tell you what actually works. The rest of this post breaks down the exact 90-day SEO sequence we run for Forsyth County landscapers — and the math on what page one actually produces.
Generic “SEO services” vs. a Forsyth County playbook
Same monthly spend. Wildly different math by month four.
| What you get | Generic SEO retainer | The Forsyth playbook |
|---|---|---|
| Keyword strategy | Broad terms, national volume | Cumming + neighborhood-level intent |
| Google Business Profile | One-time “setup” | Weekly photo + post + Q&A workflow |
| Geo pages on site | Maybe one “service area” page | 5+ neighborhood-specific pages |
| Review strategy | “Ask your customers” | Automated request loop, 60+ per year |
| Time to Maps 3-pack | 9–14 months if ever | 58–84 days for a Forsyth landscaper |
| What you own at month 12 | A PDF audit nobody reads | Indexed assets producing leads |
One finished Forsyth project, photographed properly, becomes 6–10 indexed organic assets — the foundation of a page-one ranking.
Stop “doing SEO.” Start owning Cumming search results.
You’ve probably been pitched generic “SEO services” at some point — usually a $1,500/month retainer where someone in another time zone changes a few meta tags and emails you a ranking report nobody reads. That’s not SEO for Forsyth County landscapers. That’s billable hours dressed up as marketing.
The landscapers winning Cumming, Coal Mountain, and the GA-400 corridor right now aren’t doing generic SEO. They built location authority for one specific county. Five neighborhood pages. A weekly GBP rhythm. Reviews requested from every signed client. Photos uploaded with proper geo tags. That stack — boring as it sounds — beats every fancy AI-content-spinner strategy on the market for one simple reason: Google trusts local relevance more than volume.
The Forsyth landscapers on page one didn’t outspend anyone. They out-localized everyone. There’s a difference, and it’s everything.— After 40+ local SEO engagements across North Atlanta
Real talk: you don’t need an enterprise agency to handle North Atlanta marketing. You need someone who knows the difference between “ranking for landscaper” and “ranking for landscaper in Cumming for someone living near Bethelview Road.” Those are completely different searches with completely different intent and completely different math.
The three moves that pull a Forsyth landscaper onto page one.
Most landscapers in Cumming chase Facebook ads and Nextdoor posts. The ones quietly winning are doing none of that — they’re running these three SEO moves and answering the phone all summer.
The 90-day SEO stack for a Cumming landscaper.
None of these work alone. Skip the foundation and the content has nothing to rank on. Skip the content and the foundation has nothing to feed. Run them in order, every time.
Google Business Profile + technical site cleanup.
Step one is fixing what’s broken. The average Forsyth landscaper we audit has 11+ NAP inconsistencies across citation directories, a GBP with the wrong primary category, and a website missing basic schema markup. The first 21 days of every SEO engagement we run is pure foundation: GBP rebuild, citation cleanup, schema deployment, indexability fixes. Unsexy work. Nobody else does it. It’s why everyone else takes 14 months.
Neighborhood content.
Five geo-targeted service pages — one for Bethelview Road, one for Matt Highway, and three more for the highest-intent Forsyth pockets. Each page hand-written, not AI-spun. Each page indexed inside 14 days. This is where 73% of the ranking lift comes from.
Review acceleration.
Google’s local ranking algorithm weights review volume and recency heavily. We deploy a one-tap text-message review request that goes out within 24 hours of project handover. Most Forsyth landscapers add 40+ reviews in 90 days using this. Most competitors add 3.
Why the order matters more than the moves.
Skip the foundation and the content has nothing to rank on. Skip the content and the reviews don’t have anywhere to send traffic. Skip the reviews and your top-3 ranking has nothing to convert with. Done in order, the math compounds. Done out of order — or with one leg missing — the math breaks. This is why most Forsyth County landscapers pay for SEO for a year and rank nowhere.
Every shot from a Forsyth project — properly geo-tagged and uploaded to GBP weekly — becomes a tiny ranking signal Google reads.
How we run a Cumming landscaper SEO engagement.
Audit + foundation
Full Forsyth County competitor reverse-engineer. Pull every landscaper ranking in Cumming, Coal Mountain, and the GA-400 corridor. Map their backlinks, content, GBP setup. Then rebuild yours from the ground up — proper categories, NAP consistency, schema deployment, citation cleanup.
Content + neighborhood pages
5 geo-targeted service pages written and indexed. 8–12 long-form posts targeting the specific Forsyth questions homeowners type into Google. Weekly GBP posts. Photo uploads with geo metadata. Review acceleration launches day 30.
Compound + measure
By day 73 most Forsyth landscapers we work with hit the Maps 3-pack for at least one primary keyword. Day 90 we measure: inbound calls, form fills, ranking positions across all target keywords. Then we double down on what’s pulling and prune what isn’t.
Mid-project documentation — not just finished shots — is what locks in long-tail keyword rankings for Forsyth County searches.
The Bethelview Road landscaper who stopped relying on referrals.
A South Forsyth landscaper running a 6-year-old shop covering Bethelview and Sharon Road called us last March. Beautiful portfolio, zero Google presence — and a referral pipeline that had quietly plateaued the past two seasons. We found 14 indexing errors, zero local keyword pages, and a Google Business Profile with the wrong primary category locked in since 2021. By day 58, three neighborhood pages were live and ranking. By month 4, he was taking 11 new homeowner inquiries per week from just the Windermere and Polo Fields searches alone.
Inbound organic calls for a Forsyth landscaper, week over week.
SEO calls don’t ramp linearly — they compound. Week 12 is usually 4–6x week 6, and month 6 is usually 2x week 12.
Behind the scenes — every Forsyth content day produces 60–80 indexed Google assets over the following 12 months.
Six questions every Cumming landscaper should answer before hiring an SEO agency.
These six questions surface 90% of what matters. If an agency can’t answer them clearly and specifically about your Forsyth market, walk.
“Show me a landscaper you ranked in Forsyth County.”
Not a generic “contractor” case study. A specific Forsyth or Cumming landscaper. Real keywords. Real timeline. Real revenue.
“How many neighborhood-level pages do I get?”
The answer should be 5 minimum, hand-written, indexed within 14 days. “We’ll write one service-area page” is a flag.
“Do you handle my Google Business Profile weekly or once?”
Weekly is the right answer. Once is the wrong answer. GBP signal weight has tripled since 2023.
“What does your review acceleration system look like?”
Should be one-tap text within 24 hours of project completion. If they say “we’ll send your customers a link,” they don’t have a system.
“Do you work with multiple landscapers in Forsyth County?”
If yes, run. One landscaper per geo, period. Otherwise the keyword strategy can’t be exclusive.
“What’s the realistic timeline for the Maps 3-pack?”
For a clean Forsyth foundation: 58–84 days. Anyone promising 30 days is lying. Anyone quoting 12 months hasn’t done it.
A finished Forsyth project — and the digital trail it leaves across organic search, Maps, and GBP for the next 24 months.
What Cumming landscapers keep asking us about SEO.
For the Google Maps 3-pack on a primary local keyword like “landscaper Cumming GA” — yes, regularly, in 58–84 days, assuming a clean GBP foundation and 5 neighborhood pages launched in the first 30 days. For the organic blue-link section on competitive head terms — typically 4–6 months. The Maps pack is where most of the calls come from, so we prioritize that first.
Working range we see is $2,800–$5,500/month for a serious local SEO program — covering GBP management, content production, review acceleration, and on-site work. Less than that and corners get cut. More than that for a single county is usually national-agency markup. The math: if a single signed landscaper project averages $40K-plus in revenue, even one extra inbound call per month covers the program for the year.
Probably for the first 60 days, yes. Ads keep the phone ringing while organic builds. By day 90, most Forsyth landscapers we work with have cut ad spend by 40–60%. By month 6, many turn ads off entirely and the organic funnel sustains the pipeline. Anyone telling you SEO replaces ads on day one is selling you a fantasy.
No. One landscaper per city per geo, full stop. We will not run SEO for two landscapers in Cumming or two in South Forsyth simultaneously. That conflict-of-interest line is non-negotiable — it’s the entire reason we can promise category dominance to the client we do work with.
That’s the most common starting point for new clients, honestly. The vast majority of “SEO” sold to Forsyth landscapers is meta-tag edits and monthly PDFs with no foundation work. We start with a free audit, show you exactly what’s missing, and tell you whether 90 days of real work would change the math. Sometimes the answer is “yes, here’s the plan.” Sometimes the answer is “your situation needs ads first.” Either way you get clarity.
Picture your Cumming landscaper business answering inbound calls instead of chasing them.
If you want a 30-minute call where we look at your site, your Google Business Profile, and the top three landscapers ranking against you in Forsyth County — and tell you exactly what’s leaking — that call is free.
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