How much should a Cumming landscaper spend on marketing?
The hidden cost of doing zero paid marketing for a Cumming landscaper isn’t zero — it’s $340,000 in lifetime client value walking straight to the competitor whose name showed up first on Google. Here’s the budget math nobody at the trade show is telling you.
Zero marketing isn’t free. It’s the most expensive option on the table.
Here’s the thing. Most Cumming landscapers we talk to think they have no marketing budget. They don’t run ads. They don’t pay for SEO. They don’t post on Instagram. They’ve built the business on referrals and Nextdoor mentions, and the phone keeps ringing — so what’s the problem?
The problem is the math you can’t see. Take a landscaper serving the Vickery and Lambert HS zone. Strong referral base, finishes out a steady stream of new construction landscaping, never spent a dollar on a digital campaign in his life. The phone’s ringing. He thinks his marketing budget is $0.
Real talk: his actual marketing cost is closer to $28,000/month — it’s just hidden in lost revenue. Every Forsyth homeowner who searches “landscaper near me” and never sees his name. Every $4K hardscape project that goes to a newer competitor with a Google Business Profile. Every 6-year maintenance relationship at $3,847 lifetime value walking straight past him because Nextdoor recommended someone else.
“Zero marketing budget” is a fiction. The dollars are still leaving — they’re just leaving as missed revenue instead of as a line item. And missed revenue is a worse expense because you can’t see it on a P&L.
The good news? Pulling that hidden cost back doesn’t take a huge spend. A Cumming landscaper doing $700K–$1.5M in revenue can usually flip from “invisible online” to “ranking in the local 3-pack” on a budget that’s a fraction of what one lost maintenance contract costs.
Zero-spend Cumming landscaper vs. one running a real budget
Both businesses pay for their marketing. One pays in dollars. One pays in missed revenue.
| What you’re spending on | Referral-only Cumming landscaper | Landscaper running 4–5% of revenue |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cash spend | $0–$200 | $2,400–$4,800 |
| New inquiries per month | 4–8 referrals | 22–35 inbound (referral + organic) |
| Average project size | $2,800 (price-shopped) | $5,400 (pre-sold by content) |
| Maintenance contract conversion | ~12% of installs | ~38% of installs |
| Lost revenue per year (estimated) | $340,000+ | ~$45,000 |
A finished paver patio in South Forsyth — the kind of $5K–$12K project that pre-sells the next maintenance contract when it’s marketed properly.
Thousands of Forsyth homeowners are sitting in year-2 builder landscaping right now.
You’ve probably noticed how much new construction has gone up in Forsyth over the last 4 years. Vickery, Lambert HS zone, the Bethelview Road corridor, Matt Highway — all of it filling in with $700K–$1.4M homes whose original landscaping was the cheapest possible builder package.
Those homeowners are now in year 2, year 3, year 5 of their builds. The basic shrubs are looking tired. The yard is missing a patio. The kids are old enough to want a fire pit. The wife wants outdoor lighting. They’re ready to spend $4K–$25K on landscaping right now. And they’re finding contractors on Google, not in the HOA Facebook group.
This is the buyer pool a Cumming landscaper running zero marketing is invisible to. Nextdoor doesn’t reach them — they’re new homeowners, not 15-year residents. The HOA forum is fading because the demographic has shifted. Search has replaced word-of-mouth as the dominant first contact, and 61% of new landscaping inquiries in Forsyth County now start with a Google search instead of a referral.
The Cumming landscapers booking $20K hardscape projects right now aren’t the ones with the longest history in Forsyth. They’re the ones who show up first when a Vickery homeowner picks up their phone.— What 25+ Forsyth landscaping sales calls have taught us
If your only acquisition channel is referrals from finished projects, you’re competing for one slice of an expanding market while the other 60% of inquiries flow to whoever ranks first. That’s not a marketing question. It’s a survival question.
4–5% of revenue. Three buckets. That’s the budget.
A Cumming landscaper doing $800K–$2M in revenue should land at 4–5% on marketing if maintaining, 6–7% if growing — split across three buckets in roughly the same ratio every time.
Where the right $2,400–$5,000/month actually goes.
Landscaping is a different game from pool building — projects are smaller, more frequent, and produce recurring maintenance revenue. The budget reflects that. Less paid ads, more local visibility, more content that builds long-term trust.
Local SEO + Google Business Profile.
For a landscaper, this is the bucket that does the most work for the dollar. Real ongoing investment in contractor lead generation built on local SEO and GBP optimization compounds for years. Once your listing ranks for “landscaper Cumming GA,” “hardscape contractor Forsyth,” and 8–10 neighborhood phrases (Vickery, Lambert, Coal Mountain, Sawnee Mountain Preserve), the inquiries arrive forever — even when you stop paying.
Content + photo/video.
Before-and-after walkthroughs. Drone reels of finished hardscapes. Time-lapse paver installs. A Forsyth homeowner who watches three of your project videos isn’t price-shopping anymore — they’re hiring you.
Targeted paid ads.
Light Google Ads spend on high-intent terms (“hardscape contractor Cumming”) plus seasonal Meta campaigns for spring landscape refreshes. $300–$700/month is plenty when the SEO foundation is solid.
Why this beats every “set and forget” alternative.
Running these three buckets together for 12 months in Cumming produces a marketing flywheel where each completed install becomes 6–10 indexed assets, the GBP listing climbs, the SEO compounds, and your cost per booked $5K-plus project drops below what most landscapers waste on a single Angi subscription. After year one, you can pull back the spend and the calls keep coming.
A stacked-stone retaining wall in Forsyth County — content like this carries the local-SEO bucket all year.
How we move a Cumming landscaper from $0 marketing to a real budget.
Quantify the leak
We map your current revenue against Forsyth County search volume for landscaping and hardscape terms. Most Cumming landscapers find $14K–$28K/month in missed inquiries within 30 minutes of looking at the data honestly.
Build the foundation
Site rebuild for conversion, GBP overhaul, neighborhood pages for Vickery / Lambert HS / Bethelview / Matt Highway, monthly content shoot system, review-collection workflow. The unsexy infrastructure most agencies skip.
Compound the maintenance side
By month 6, organic inquiries are flowing. By month 12, 35–40% of your installs convert into recurring maintenance contracts at $3,847 average lifetime value. That’s the bucket that turns landscaping into a real business.
The new-construction landscaper who’d never run a digital campaign.
The landscaper we mentioned earlier — strong referral base finishing new construction landscaping in Vickery and Lambert HS zone — had never spent a dollar on digital. Just Nextdoor mentions and word-of-mouth from finished projects. He thought it worked. We pulled the search data: 148 monthly searches for landscaper-related terms in his service area. He was capturing roughly 4 of them. We rebuilt his site, set up his GBP, started monthly content shoots, and ran a tight $400/month Google Ads layer. By month 9, inbound digital inquiries were averaging 23/week, his average project size had jumped from $2,800 to $5,400, and his maintenance-contract conversion was up from 12% to 38%. Same business. Same crew. Real budget.
Inbound digital inquiries per week, month over month.
The maintenance side compounds even faster. Every install becomes a 6-year client relationship — that’s where the real budget pays itself back.
Behind the scenes — the content bucket of a Cumming landscaper’s budget pays for shoots like this and produces months of indexed assets.
Six questions every Cumming landscaper should answer before next year’s spend.
Whether you’re already running a budget or thinking of starting one, these six questions tell you exactly where you are vs. where the math says you should be.
“What’s my actual cost per maintenance-contract client?”
If you can’t break it out by source, you’re flying blind on the most valuable revenue line in landscaping.
“How many monthly searches happen in my service area?”
Most Cumming landscapers are shocked when they see the number. Knowing it tells you exactly how much revenue you’re missing.
“What does my Google Business Profile look like today?”
Last photo upload date, response rate to reviews, services list. If any of those is more than 60 days stale, your GBP is hurting you.
“Am I budgeting for the spring rush in February?”
Forsyth landscaping inquiries spike Mar–May. The budget needs to push hardest in Feb so the SEO and content are loaded by then.
“How much of my budget is on referrals vs. acquisition?”
Referrals are a result of past spend. They aren’t a strategy. If 95% of your pipeline is referrals, you’re one bad year from a real problem.
“What does my reporting actually look like?”
Real-time tracking of inquiries by source, or a once-a-month PDF nobody reads? You should know what’s working before the month closes.
Outdoor lighting and walkway work — the upsell category most Cumming landscapers leave on the table when they don’t market it.
A backyard fire pit and seating area — the kind of mid-tier hardscape that compounds into year-round maintenance revenue.
What Cumming landscapers keep asking about budget.
For a $700K–$1.5M Cumming landscaper, the realistic floor is around $1,800–$2,400/month split across all three buckets. Below that, you can’t fund local SEO and a working content cadence at the same time, and you’ll bottleneck the GBP ramp.
Because referrals are an output of past work, not a growth strategy. Forsyth County is adding new homeowners faster than your existing client base can refer them. If you don’t show up in search, those new buyers go to whoever does — and your share of the market shrinks every year even if your revenue stays flat.
February. Forsyth landscaping search volume starts climbing late Feb and peaks April–May. If your SEO, content, and ad spend aren’t fully active by mid-Feb, you’re paying full price to compete for spring buyers who already locked in with someone else.
You can, but the math is rough on landscaping margins. A shared $40 Angi lead with 4 other landscapers bidding closes 8–10% of the time. Your real cost per booked job is closer to $400 — for a project that may only be $2,800. Owned channels produce exclusive inquiries at a fraction of that cost once they ramp.
No. One landscaper per geo, full stop. We will not run marketing for two landscaping companies in Cumming or surrounding Forsyth County simultaneously. That conflict-of-interest line is non-negotiable — it’s the entire reason we can credibly promise category dominance.
Find out what your hidden marketing cost is in Cumming this year.
30-minute call, no pitch slides. We pull the actual search volume in your Forsyth service area, look at your GBP and site, and tell you exactly how much revenue is leaking. We do a few of these every week with landscapers across the broader North Atlanta corridor.
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