You can be the best electrician, remodeler, or landscaper in the county and still stay slow — because two things decide whether a contracting business grows, and neither of them is how well you swing a hammer. The first is whether customers can find you when they’re ready to hire. The second is whether you actually get paid without spending your evenings chasing checks. Here’s how to handle both without hiring a marketing department.
Getting noticed: show up where customers are already looking
When someone needs a contractor, they don’t flip through a phone book — they pull out their phone and search “roofer near me” or “kitchen remodel” plus their town. Your job is to be the name that shows up, looks legit, and is easy to contact. A few moves do most of the work.
1. Claim and fill out your Google Business Profile
This is the single highest-return thing a local contractor can do, and it’s free. It’s what puts you on the map — literally — when people search nearby. Add your service area, hours, phone number, the services you offer, and real photos. A complete profile beats an empty one every time, and it beats the competitors who never bothered to claim theirs.
2. Ask every happy customer for a review
Reviews are modern word of mouth. Most people won’t leave one unless you ask — so ask, right when the job’s done and they’re happy. A simple “Would you mind leaving us a quick review? Here’s the link” text is enough. Ten honest reviews will do more for you than any ad.
3. Show your work with photos
Before-and-after shots are proof you can’t fake. Snap a few photos on every job and post them to your profile and website. Homeowners hire the contractor whose work they can already picture in their own house.
4. Have a simple website that loads fast and works on a phone
It doesn’t need to be fancy. It needs your services, your service area, a couple of photos, your reviews, and a big, obvious way to call or request a quote. Most people will find you on their phone — if your site is slow or clumsy there, you lose them before they ever call.
5. Keep your name, address, and phone number identical everywhere
Google, Facebook, your website, directories — the same info, spelled the same way, every place it appears. Mismatched listings confuse search engines and customers alike, and confused customers call someone else.
Getting paid: invoices that look professional and get paid faster
Winning the job is half the battle. Getting paid on time is the other half, and it’s where a lot of good contractors quietly lose money. The fix is to make paying you easy, clear, and fast.
Send the invoice immediately — and make it easy to pay
The longer you wait to invoice, the longer you wait to get paid. Send it the day the work wraps, while the value is fresh in the customer’s mind. And give them a way to pay online — a card or bank payment link gets you paid days or weeks faster than “mail me a check.” If you already run your business on Square, Square Invoices let you send a professional invoice by email or text with a Pay Now button built in, so the money lands without anyone making a trip to the bank.
Put everything the customer needs on the invoice
A clear invoice prevents the “wait, what’s this for?” phone call that delays payment. Include:
- Your business name, logo, and contact info
- An itemized list of work and materials, with prices
- The total, plus any deposit already paid
- The due date and which payment methods you accept
- An invoice number for your records
Take a deposit up front
For larger jobs, ask for a deposit before you start — it covers your materials and signals a real, committed customer. Progress payments on long jobs keep cash flowing, so you’re never fronting an entire project out of your own pocket.
Set clear terms and let reminders do the chasing
Spell out when payment is due — “due on completion,” “net 15” — right on the invoice, so there’s no ambiguity later. Then let your invoicing tool send automatic reminders on anything unpaid. A polite nudge from software is easier than an awkward call from you, and it works.
Keep your records in one place
When invoices and payments live in one system instead of a shoebox, tax time stops being a nightmare — and you can actually see which jobs and which customers are worth more of your time.
The quiet advantage: do both, consistently
None of this is complicated. The contractors who pull ahead aren’t the ones with the flashiest marketing — they’re the ones who show up where customers search, look trustworthy when they get there, and make paying quick and painless. Do those things consistently and you’ll spend less time hunting for the next job and chasing the last check, and more time doing the work you’re actually good at.
Want help getting found online or setting up invoicing that runs itself? That’s exactly what we do at Target Marketeer — done-for-you, and built to fit a small-business budget. See how we can help.


