In this guide, you’ll learn how to stop losing work to missed calls, convert your website into a booking machine, build a simple social and reviews engine that works while you’re on a job, kill phone tag with self‑serve scheduling, and track the numbers that actually move revenue. Think of it as a practical system you can put in place step by step, so you can do more of what you do best: the work.
Great Plumbing Isn’t Enough—Systems Are
You can be the most skilled plumber in town and still have an empty calendar if customers can’t reach you or don’t remember you. Most people with a nine‑to‑five don’t chase their paycheck; they show up, and the money follows. In a trade business, especially when you’re the owner, the money follows systems:
- A capture system that answers and follows up when you can’t.
- A conversion system that turns interest into booked jobs.
- A reputation system that makes choosing you a no‑brainer.
- A scheduling system that eliminates friction.
- A measurement system so you know what’s working.
If any one of those is missing, you don’t have a marketing problem—you have a systems problem. Let’s fix that.
Plug the Biggest Leak: Missed Calls
Every missed call is a potential job walking straight to your competitor. You’re under a sink, you’re soldering a joint, or you’re knee‑deep in a slab leak. You shouldn’t stop to answer. But you also can’t afford silence on the other end.
The Missed‑Call Playbook
- Immediate Text‑Back (under 30 seconds)
Use an auto‑reply that fires when a call isn’t answered within a few rings:
“Hey, this is {{Company}}. We just missed your call. Are you dealing with an emergency, a quote, or a routine service? Reply 1, 2, or 3 and we’ll get you scheduled.”
- If they reply 1, trigger a priority return call.
- If 2 or 3, send your self‑book link and collect details.
- Smart Voicemail + Transcription
Keep voicemail short (10–15 seconds) with a clear fallback:
“Thanks for calling {{Company}}. We’re helping another customer. Text us at this number to book now, or leave your name, address, and issue—we’ll return your call shortly.”
Transcriptions land in your CRM so no lead gets lost. - Overflow & After‑Hours
Route unanswered calls to a virtual receptionist or on‑call team with access to your online scheduler. The goal is simple: every inquiry gets a response the first time—call, text, or both. - Two‑Way Texting for Job Details
Let customers send photos or short videos of the problem. You’ll qualify faster, quote smarter, and show up better prepared.
Scripts You Can Use Today
- Quick Qualification:
“Thanks for reaching out—are you seeing active water right now, or is this a recurring issue? What’s the nearest intersection? Any pictures you can text me?” - Estimate Follow‑Up (24 hours later):
“Checking in on the estimate from {{Company}}. Want to lock in a time this week or have questions about options?” - Closed‑Job Review Ask (same day):
“We appreciate you choosing {{Company}}. Mind sharing a quick review about your experience today? It really helps local homeowners find a pro they can trust.”
Turn Your Website From Ghost Town to Booking Machine
Many trade websites look nice but do little to drive calls. If a customer can’t tell who you are, what you do, where you serve, and how to book within five seconds, you’re losing them.
Above‑the‑Fold Checklist (Homepage)
- Clickable phone number with “Call Now” and office hours.
- “Book Service” button that goes to live scheduling.
- Service area (city + surrounding suburbs) in plain text.
- Trust elements: star rating, “5,000+ homes served,” “Licensed & Insured,” badges.
- Primary services listed (Water Heater Install, Leak Detection, Drain Cleaning, etc.).
Service Pages That Convert
Create a dedicated page for each high‑value service. On every page:
- Problem → Solution in plain language.
- What to expect (diagnostic, options, upfront pricing).
- Before/after or case studies with one photo per section.
- FAQ (e.g., “Do I need a permit?” “How fast can you get here?”).
- CTA repeated three times: top, mid‑page, bottom.
Local Search Fundamentals (So People Can Find You)
- Claim and fully complete your Google Business Profile. Add service categories, service areas, hours, and real job photos.
- Keep your Name, Address, Phone (NAP) consistent across the web.
- Use service‑area pages for the towns you actually serve (not a spammy list—quality content tailored to each area).
- Add schema markup (LocalBusiness, Service, FAQ) so search engines understand your pages.
- Compress images and keep load times fast. Mobile first, always.
Bottom line: Your website’s job isn’t to be fancy. It’s to get a homeowner from “I have a problem” to “I’m booked with you” in as few clicks as possible.
Stop Ignoring Social—Make It Work for You
You don’t need to be an influencer. You need to look active, professional, and trustworthy when a homeowner checks you out.
What to Post (Keep It Simple)
- Before/after: old corroded heater vs. clean install.
- Short explanations: “Why this toilet kept running.”
- Customer stories: “We saved this family’s wood floors by catching a pinhole slab leak.”
- Crew shots: names, certifications, community involvement.
- Maintenance tips: “How often to flush a tanked heater.”
Batch content once a week. Schedule it to auto‑post. You’re building familiarity so when a need hits, your name feels like the safe choice.
Reviews Are the Real Social Proof
Automation is your friend:
- Job closed in your invoicing app → delay 30–60 minutes → send a review request by text.
- If no response in 48 hours → friendly reminder.
- If they leave a negative rating in your first step → route to a private feedback form and a personal phone call.
Respond to every public review. Keep it personal, professional, and specific:
“Thanks, Maria, for trusting us with your tankless flush in Cedar Park. I’ll pass your note to Gabe—he’ll be thrilled.”
Kill the Phone Tag: Let Customers Book Themselves
Back‑and‑forth scheduling burns hours you can’t bill. Self‑serve booking solves that.
Non‑Negotiables for Online Scheduling
- Real‑time availability synced to your calendar.
- Appointment types (diagnostic visit, water heater replacement, drain clearing).
- Service windows (8–10am, 10–12pm, etc.).
- Pre‑qualification form (address, photos, access notes, pets, gate codes).
- Automated confirmations and reminders (with easy reschedule links).
- Optional deposit or card on file for high‑demand slots.
This is a win‑win‑win: your board stays full, customers pick what works for them, and your techs roll from one prepared job to the next.
Stay Top of Mind Without Being Annoying
Customers forget—even when you did great work. Build a simple nurture rhythm:
- Seasonal reminders: winterization, anode‑rod checks, tankless flushes.
- Service‑based follow‑ups: “It’s been a year since we replaced your PRV—want a quick system check?”
- Educational notes: “What that banging sound (water hammer) means and how to stop it.”
- Memberships: discounted annual checkups, priority service, extended warranties.
Keep it friendly, short, and helpful. Think “neighborly nudge,” not spam.
Numbers That Actually Matter
You can’t improve what you don’t measure. Start with a simple dashboard:
- Answer Rate: % of calls answered live. Goal: trend it up, then capture the rest by text‑back.
- Speed to Lead: time from inquiry to first response (call or text). Faster wins.
- Book Rate: inquiries that become scheduled visits.
- Show Rate: scheduled visits that turn into actual jobs.
- Average Ticket: by service type.
- Review Velocity: new reviews per month + average rating.
- Repeat Rate: % of customers who use you again within 12 months.
Use call tracking numbers for marketing channels (website, trucks, mailers). Add UTM parameters to your booking links so every job has a source. Review this weekly. Adjust one thing at a time so you know what caused the change.
Roger’s Marketing Machine: A 6‑Part Blueprint
Here’s a practical framework you can put in place without burning months on trial and error.
1) Capture Every Inquiry
- Missed‑call text‑back with quick‑reply options (Emergency / Quote / Routine).
- Overflow answering for business hours and after‑hours.
- Voicemail that always offers text and self‑booking.
2) Convert With a Purpose‑Built Website
- Above‑the‑fold CTA, service area, and trust signals.
- High‑intent service pages with FAQs and photos.
- Site speed tuned for phones.
3) Build Social Proof on Autopilot
- Job‑closed → delayed review request → reminder → private escalation for negatives.
- Post once a week in batches: before/after, tips, crew, customer stories.
- Reply to comments and reviews like a neighbor.
4) Offer Self‑Serve Scheduling
- Real‑time calendar, appointment types, service windows.
- Pre‑qualification questions and photos.
- Automated confirmations, reminders, and reschedules.
5) Nurture for Lifetime Value
- Seasonal and service‑based reminder texts/emails.
- Membership plans for annual safety checks and maintenance.
- Simple educational touch points.
6) Measure, Review, Improve
- Weekly metrics: answer rate, speed to lead, book rate, show rate, average ticket, reviews, repeat rate.
- Monthly web check: rankings for key services + site health.
- Quarterly offer test: add or tweak one promotion (e.g., “same‑day water heater swap” or “free camera inspection with drain clearing”).
Your Two‑Week Implementation Plan
Days 1–2: Audit & Setup
- List all phone numbers, hours, and who answers.
- Turn on missed‑call text‑back.
- Rewrite voicemail to include text option and booking.
Days 3–4: Website Wins
- Add “Call Now” (clickable) and “Book Service” buttons to every page.
- Put the service area and hours above the fold.
- Create or update top three service pages (e.g., Water Heater, Drain, Leak).
Days 5–6: Google Business Profile
- Verify categories, services, hours, service areas.
- Upload 10 real job photos with captions.
- Add Q&A to your profile (answer the common questions yourself).
Days 7–8: Reviews Engine
- Set the job‑closed → review request automation.
- Draft reply templates for positive/neutral/negative reviews.
Days 9–10: Social Batch
- Capture 12 before/after photos and 4 crew shots.
- Write short captions.
- Schedule posts for the next month.
Days 11–12: Online Scheduling
- Define appointment types and service windows.
- Add the booking link to your header, footer, and Google profile.
Days 13–14: Dashboard
- Create a simple spreadsheet or CRM dashboard with your core metrics.
- Review last week’s results. Choose one bottleneck to improve next week.
Templates You Can Steal
Missed‑Call Text
“Sorry we missed you—this is {{Company}}. Is this an emergency (1), quote (2), or routine service (3)? You can also book instantly here: {{Link}}.”
Review Request (60 minutes post‑job)
“Thanks for choosing {{Company}} today. Would you share a quick review about your experience? It helps local families find a trustworthy pro: {{ReviewLink}}.”
Estimate Follow‑Up (24–48 hours)
“Quick check‑in: do you want to move forward with the {{Service}} we discussed? We can hold the next available window for you: {{Link}}.”
Maintenance Reminder (6 months)
“Friendly reminder from {{Company}}: it’s time to flush your tankless / check your anode rod. Want us to handle it this week? Reply YES and we’ll send times.”
Common Pitfalls (And Easy Fixes)
- Long contact forms. Ask only what you need to book and prepare. You can capture more info after the appointment is set.
- Fancy sliders and auto‑playing video. They slow down load times and distract from calling or booking. Keep it simple.
- Stock photos only. Use real photos from real jobs. Authentic beats perfect.
- No service area. Don’t make customers guess. Put your city and suburbs right up front.
- Inconsistent NAP. One wrong phone number on a directory can hurt discovery. Fix it.
- One‑and‑done reviews. Keep new ones coming monthly; velocity matters.
A Quick Word on Pricing Anxiety
When the phone is quiet, the mind goes to scary places: Am I charging too much? Should I discount more? Remember—quiet phones often mean signal problems, not price problems. If your answer rate, speed to lead, and booking flow are weak, you’re losing opportunities before price even enters the conversation. Fix the systems first. Then, if needed, refine your pricing and options presentation.
Building Trust at Every Touchpoint
Every message, page, and process should answer a homeowner’s unspoken questions:
- “Can I trust you?” → Real reviews, licenses, insurance, branded trucks, clean uniforms, name badges.
- “Do you serve my problem and my area?” → Clear service lists and cities.
- “How do I book?” → One‑tap call and the obvious “Book Service” button.
- “What will happen next?” → Transparent process: diagnosis, options, price before work, cleanup, warranty.
- “Will you respect my home?” → Shoe covers, drop cloths, and photo examples.
Make these promises explicit on your site and in your texts. Then deliver them consistently.
Conclusion
Marketing For Your Plumbing Company – Roger’s Marketing Machine is about running your shop on systems, not stress. Capture every inquiry with smart call handling and instant text‑back. Turn your website into a clear, fast path to booking. Build a steady drumbeat of real reviews and simple, helpful posts that keep your name top of mind. Let customers schedule themselves so the phone tag doesn’t steal your day. And watch the numbers that matter so you can tweak one lever at a time and improve on purpose. Do this, and you won’t be chasing work—you’ll be choosing it.