How to get more remodeling leads in Marietta — without relying on Angi.
I’ll tell you what most marketing agencies won’t admit about Angi for remodelers in East Cobb. The model isn’t designed for the $80K kitchen homeowner. It never was.
The confession most agencies won’t tell their remodeling clients.
Here’s the thing nobody in marketing wants to say out loud: Angi was never designed to send a Marietta remodeler the $90K kitchen homeowner. The platform was built around small, fast, transactional service jobs — gutter cleanings, faucet swaps, $1,200 bathroom touch-ups. It works fine for that. It does not work for full kitchen rebuilds, primary bath gut-jobs, or whole-home remodels in Indian Hills. And every agency that sells you “we’ll optimize your Angi” knows it.
Real talk. You’re a Marietta remodeler. You signed up for Angi three years ago and you’ve been spending somewhere between $2,900 and $5,200 a month ever since. The leads you get are mostly bathroom homeowners with $14K budgets quoting four contractors against each other. The actual $80K kitchen jobs you want — Walton-zone parents finally pulling the trigger after eight years in the house — almost never come through. When they do, they’re already negotiating you against four other names because the platform encouraged that behavior.
And here’s the part nobody at Angi will say out loud: the homeowners filling out shared lead-platform forms in Marietta are the most price-shopping segment of the remodel market. The Atlanta Country Club homeowner who has $130K saved for a primary suite + closet + bath remodel isn’t on Angi. She’s been pinning kitchens for 18 months, asked her neighbor in Walton Estates who did their last project, and called whoever she Googled into the top three results.
You’ve probably noticed. The Marietta remodel project you actually want — the $70K+ kitchen, the East Cobb whole-home, the basement finish for the long-tenured Walton-zone family — almost never comes through Angi. She comes through Google, Houzz, Instagram, or a referral. The platforms can’t reach her, because she’d never use one.
The good news? Replacing the Angi spend with an owned funnel isn’t hard, it just isn’t what most agencies are built to sell you. Most agencies want a permanent ad-management retainer. We’re going to walk through what actually generates exclusive Marietta remodeling leads — the kind nobody else is bidding on.
Angi/HomeAdvisor model vs. owned-funnel model
Same monthly check. Completely different math by month nine.
| What you’re buying | Angi · HomeAdvisor · Networx · Thumbtack | Owned funnel (what we build) |
|---|---|---|
| Lead exclusivity | Sold to 4–6 remodelers simultaneously | Yours and yours alone, every time |
| Cost per lead | $90–$130 every month, every month | $30–$50 once organic ramps in month 4 |
| Average project size attracted | $8K–$22K small bath / kitchen refresh | $45K–$140K full kitchen / whole-home remodels |
| What you own at the end | Nothing — calls die the day you stop paying | Site, portfolio, rankings, reviews, Houzz feed |
| Buyer mindset | Comparison shopping, four other quotes | Pre-sold by your portfolio and process video |
A finished East Cobb primary bath — the kind of organic asset that pulls exclusive $40K+ inquiries without bidding for them.
Stop trying to “win” Angi. Make it irrelevant.
Most remodelers who hate Angi try to fix Angi. They obsess over response time. They buy Angi Leads Pro, then Angi Ads, then the premium tier. They optimize the profile. Some hire dedicated phone people just to call back leads in 60 seconds. That’s a lot of effort spent trying to be slightly better at a system structurally rigged against the project sizes you actually want.
Here’s what the remodelers winning in East Cobb, Marietta Square, Indian Hills, and Walton Estates do instead. They make Angi irrelevant by building a portfolio site that ranks, ranks hard, and never stops producing. They don’t beat the bidding war. They skip it. The Atlanta Country Club homeowner with $110K and a Pinterest board finds them on Google, scrolls a portfolio of 35 finished East Cobb kitchens, watches a process video, sees 200 five-star reviews, and books a discovery call without ever pulling up Angi.
The remodelers quitting Angi successfully aren’t getting better at lead-platform games. They built something that makes the whole game optional — and changed the project size that walks in the door.— What 100+ Marietta remodel consultations have taught us
That’s the real shift. Not “less Angi spend.” Zero Angi spend, replaced by a pipeline that does its own selling — at a project size 4–7x what Angi delivered. And it isn’t theoretical — it’s the standard playbook for remodel firms running between Marietta Square, the Johnson Ferry corridor, and Powers Ferry who’ve been at this longer than five years. Read on for what specifically replaces it.
Three owned engines. Built once. Compound forever.
Marietta remodelers who’ve quit Angi for good don’t do anything fancy. They run the same three owned engines, layered together, on autopilot. Here’s the breakdown.
The owned-funnel stack that kills Angi dependency in Marietta.
You don’t need 12 channels. You need three, wired correctly. Local search, owned-funnel paid, and content social proof. Run them together for nine months and your Angi spend becomes optional.
Local SEO that lets you ignore Angi entirely.
The first three Google results for “kitchen remodeler Marietta” eat 63% of the clicks. Owning that real estate — instead of paying Angi to do it for you — is the highest-leverage move in contractor lead generation. We build out neighborhood pages for Indian Hills, Atlanta Country Club, Walton Estates, the Sandy Plains corridor, and Marietta Square historic homes, harden the Google Business Profile with weekly project photos, and stack real local citations across Cobb County and Houzz. By month six, when an East Cobb homeowner searches “kitchen remodeler near me,” your business shows up before any Angi-promoted listing. That’s the moment lead-platform spend becomes optional.
Direct-to-form ads, not platform middlemen.
Google LSAs and Meta lead-form ads pointed at your domain, with creative built around full kitchen and primary bath projects. Same Marietta homeowner, half the cost, no four-way bidding war.
Process videos that pre-sell the consult.
Walkthrough videos of finished East Cobb kitchens. Time-lapse builds. Owner testimonials from Walton-zone families. By the time an Atlanta Country Club homeowner books, she’s watched five of your videos and stopped looking at other firms.
Compounding vs. evaporating.
Local SEO produces leads forever once it ranks — no monthly bid required. Direct ads cost a third of Angi’s pricing because there’s no middleman markup. Process content gives every Marietta caller a reason to skip the four-other-quotes routine. Together, the math flips: by month 12, your cost per booked $80K East Cobb kitchen is lower than what Angi used to charge you for one shared $14K bathroom lead.
Mid-build content like this is what makes the local map pack untouchable in Cobb County — permanent inventory, not a $104 line item.
How we walk a Marietta remodeler off Angi.
Audit the Angi bleed
We pull your last 12 months of Angi/HomeAdvisor/Networx/Thumbtack spend, calculate true cost-per-acquisition after close rate, and benchmark against owned-funnel projections. Most Marietta remodelers are stunned at the real number — usually 4–7x what they think.
Build the replacement
Site rebuild with full portfolio, Google Business Profile dominance, neighborhood pages for Indian Hills, Atlanta Country Club, Walton Estates, and Marietta Square historic homes, process video shoot day, before-and-after photo workflow. Angi spend stays on (reduced) so you don’t go cold during the transition.
Cut Angi off — and watch project size jump
By month 6, you’re ranking for “kitchen remodeler Marietta” plus 30+ neighborhood and project-type variations. Inbound exclusive leads exceed Angi volume — and the average project size walking in the door jumps from $14K to $55K+. We taper your platform spend; most remodel clients are at zero by month 9.
A completed Walton-zone kitchen becomes 12+ permanent organic assets — none of which expire when you stop paying a platform.
The Walton Estates remodeler who shut Angi off and tripled average project size.
A ten-year design-build remodel firm working Walton Estates, Indian Hills, and the broader East Cobb area was paying Angi, HomeAdvisor, and Thumbtack a combined $3,940 a month. They were closing about 9 of every 116 leads — roughly 7.8% — at an average project size of $19,400 (mostly small baths and refreshes). Eight months into our engagement, organic site traffic was up 1,328%, they were answering 21 inbound exclusive calls per week from their own funnel, and average project size had jumped to $62,000 (full kitchens and whole-home work). They cancelled all three platforms in March. Q2 closed-revenue was 3.1x the same quarter the year before.
Inbound exclusive Marietta remodel leads after cutting Angi spend.
Owned funnels keep producing after the spend stops. Angi doesn’t. That’s the difference between an asset and a habit.
Behind the scenes — every East Cobb remodel we shoot becomes 12+ indexed organic assets. None of them expire when you stop paying a platform.
Six steps every Marietta remodeler uses to leave Angi for good.
You can do this on your own. You’ll move slower than working with a specialized agency, but the steps are the same — and skipping any one of them is why most “Angi exits” fail by month two.
Calculate your real Angi CPL
Total platform spend ÷ closed projects, not ÷ leads. Most Marietta remodelers are paying $2,400–$4,800 per booked job through Angi after you do the actual division. Knowing the real number breaks the spell fast.
Lock down the Google Business Profile
Geo-tagged before/after photos every two weeks, weekly posts, every review answered, service area set to East Cobb plus Marietta proper. Free, takes 4 hours/month, beats most paid efforts.
Build five neighborhood pages
One page each for Indian Hills, Atlanta Country Club, Walton Estates, the Sandy Plains corridor, and Marietta Square historic homes. Real photos, real project specs, real reviews. These beat Angi in the local pack.
Run direct-to-site Meta + LSA ads
Form fills land in your CRM, not Angi’s. Cost-per-lead drops to $30–$52 with the right Walton-zone targeting. Full-kitchen creative outperforms generic remodel copy 4:1.
Shoot every Marietta job for content
Process video before, during, after. Time-lapse cabinet install. Owner walkthrough at handover. Each completed East Cobb kitchen should produce 12+ permanent assets — Reels, YouTube cuts, blog photos, Houzz uploads.
Taper, don’t quit cold
Cut Angi spend by 25% per month over four months as the owned funnel ramps. Going cold turkey on Angi without a replacement is what kills most remodel exits in the first 60 days.
The kind of finished East Cobb whole-home remodel that becomes a year of indexable, ranking content — not a $104 line item that vanishes the next morning.
What Marietta remodelers ask before quitting Angi.
Almost never. The smart play is to keep Angi running on a reduced budget — 50–60% of current spend — for the first 90 days while the owned funnel comes online. By month 6 most of our Marietta remodel clients are at 30% of original Angi spend. By month 9, zero. Going cold turkey before the replacement funnel ramps is how most exits stall and end up reactivating Angi at a worse rate.
Working range: $4,500–$9,500 per month for a serious owned-funnel build for a Marietta remodeler doing $1.8M–$8M in annual revenue. That includes site rebuild, Google Business optimization, content production, ads management, and reporting. Most clients are spending $3,200–$5,200 on Angi alone — so the swap is roughly a wash in month one and dramatically cheaper by month nine, especially when project size jumps.
Same model, same problems. HomeAdvisor and Angi share the same parent company at this point — leads often overlap. Networx and Thumbtack play the exact same shared-bidding game with slightly different pricing ($90–$130 per shared remodel lead in Marietta). The owned funnel replaces all of them at once. You don’t need to find a “better” lead platform.
No. One remodeler per city per geo, full stop. We will not run marketing for two remodelers in Marietta or two in Kennesaw at the same time. That conflict-of-interest line is non-negotiable — it’s the entire reason we can promise Marietta map-pack dominance to our remodel clients.
Direct-to-site ads can produce qualified inbound calls within the first 14 days if the funnel is built right. Local SEO and content take 90–180 days for first traction and 6–9 months to dominate East Cobb remodel searches. That’s why Angi tapers — not stops — during the build phase. The two-line strategy keeps your Marietta pipeline full while the replacement compounds.
Imagine answering exclusive East Cobb $80K kitchen inquiries instead of $14K bathroom comparisons.
If you want a 30-minute call where we look at your last 12 months of Angi spend, run the actual cost-per-booked-project math, and tell you exactly what an exit timeline would look like for a Marietta remodeler — that’s free. We do a few of these a week with remodelers across our regional guide on home services marketing in North Atlanta. There’s also a deeper service breakdown on our home remodeler marketing page.
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