Most contractors do not have a lead problem. They have a visibility problem.
When we audit a contractor’s marketing, we usually find the same pattern: The company does solid work, reviews are decent, the owner answers the phone, and customers are happy.
But the marketing is leaking opportunities everywhere.
The website is slow. The Google Ads account burns money. SEO is half finished. Leads are inconsistent. Tracking is broken. And nobody really knows what is working.
At 99 Calls, we have audited hundreds of contractor marketing campaigns across roofing, plumbing, HVAC, painting, landscaping, cleaning, and electrical industries. The same issues show up over and over again.
So what are the biggest problems we usually uncover during a contractor marketing audit?
Common Problems We Find During Contractor Marketing Audits
| Problem Area | What We Typically Find | Business Impact |
| Website Conversion Issues | Slow websites, weak service pages, poor mobile experience, weak calls-to-action | Lost leads and lower conversion rates |
| Google Ads Problems | Broad match waste, poor targeting, missing tracking | High ad spend with inconsistent ROI |
| Incomplete SEO | Thin content, missing city pages, weak backlinks, poor structure | Poor organic rankings and low visibility |
| Underused AI SEO Tactics | No FAQ schema, weak topical authority, generic AI content | Reduced visibility in AI search results and Google AI Overviews |
| Weak Google Business Profile Optimization | Wrong categories, inconsistent info, poor review strategy | Lower map rankings and fewer local calls |
| Broken Lead Tracking | Missing call tracking and attribution data | Inability to measure marketing performance |
| Poor Nearby City Visibility | No localized SEO strategy or geo-targeted pages | Missed leads in surrounding service areas |
| Slow Lead Response Times | Delayed callbacks and inconsistent follow-up | Lost jobs to faster competitors |
| Disconnected Marketing Strategy | SEO, ads, reviews, and content not working together | Unpredictable lead flow and stalled growth |
Let’s break down each issue in more detail.
1. The Website Looks Fine, but Does Not Convert
This is probably the biggest issue we uncover.
A contractor’s website can look modern and still perform terribly.
Most websites are built like digital brochures instead of lead generation machines.
We often find these website issues that cost business owners leads:
- No clear call-to-action above the fold
- Slow loading speeds
- Weak service pages
- Stock photos everywhere
- No trust signals
- Generic content copied from competitors
- Forms that are too long
- Mobile experience that feels clunky
The contractor thinks the site is “good enough” because it exists, but customers decide in seconds whether they trust you.
If your site does not quickly answer these questions, conversions suffer:
- What do you do?
- Where do you work?
- Why should I trust you?
- How do I contact you right now?
One thing we often recommend is building location-specific service pages that target real search demand. If you want to understand why this matters, read our guide on local SEO for contractors.
2. Google Ads Campaigns Are Wasting Budget
This one hurts because contractors are spending real money every month.
We regularly see accounts with:
- Broad match keywords pulling irrelevant traffic
- No negative keyword strategy
- Ads sending traffic to the homepage
- No call tracking
- No conversion tracking
- Campaigns running 24/7 with no schedule optimization
- One campaign targeting an entire state
Sometimes the contractor is paying for clicks from people looking for jobs, DIY advice, or cheap services outside their area.
The scary part is they often have no idea.
A properly managed Google Ads campaign should produce measurable leads, not just traffic.
This is why we tell contractors to stop focusing only on click costs. Cheap clicks mean nothing if they do not turn into booked jobs.
We cover this in more detail in our article on Why Your Google Ads Are Too Expensive.
3. SEO Was Started But Never Finished
This is extremely common.
An agency installed Yoast SEO, added a few keywords, built some random backlinks, and called it SEO.
Real SEO for contractors takes consistent work.
When we audit campaigns, we often find:
- Missing title tags and meta descriptions
- Duplicate content
- Thin service pages
- No internal linking
- Poor site structure
- No city pages
- Broken pages and redirects
- Weak backlinks
- No content strategy
Many contractors were told SEO “doesn’t work” when in reality, it was never fully implemented.
Organic SEO remains one of the best long-term investments for contractors because, unlike paid ads, leads do not disappear the moment you stop spending.
That is why we encourage contractors to build a strong organic foundation alongside paid advertising.
Our article on SEO for contractors breaks down how this process actually works.
4. AI SEO Tactics Are Being Completely Underused
This is one of the biggest shifts happening in contractor marketing right now.
Most contractors are still competing using outdated SEO tactics while ignoring how AI is changing search behavior.
Google is increasingly pulling answers directly into search results. AI Overviews are becoming more common. ChatGPT, Gemini, and voice search are influencing how homeowners find local contractors.
Yet most contractor websites are not structured for this new environment.
When we audit sites, we usually find:
- No FAQ schema
- No conversational content
- No entity optimization
- Weak topical authority
- No structured service area content
- Generic AI-written blogs with no real expertise
- No attempt to answer intent-based homeowner questions
The contractors winning right now are building content that AI systems can easily understand, trust, and surface.
That means:
- Creating highly specific service pages
- Building detailed FAQ sections
- Using real project examples
- Publishing neighborhood and city-level content
- Structuring content clearly with headings and direct answers
- Demonstrating real expertise instead of generic fluff
Ironically, AI-generated spam content is everywhere right now, which creates a huge opportunity for contractors willing to publish genuinely useful content.
Google still rewards expertise, experience, and trust.
Most contractors have the expertise already. They just are not packaging it properly online.
This is why we believe AI-assisted SEO, when done correctly, is massively underused in the home service industry.
Not because AI replaces strategy.
But because smart contractors can now scale content production, identify search intent faster, uncover low competition keyword opportunities, and build topical authority far more efficiently than before.
The companies adapting early are gaining visibility while competitors are still relying on outdated SEO playbooks.
5. The Google Business Profile Is Barely Optimized
A contractor can rank well organically and still lose local visibility if their profile is weak.
We often audit profiles with these GBP mistakes:
- Wrong categories
- Missing services
- Very few photos
- No regular updates
- Inconsistent business information
- Weak review strategy
- Poor service area setup
Meanwhile, competitors with fewer reviews dominate the map pack because their profiles are better optimized.
Reviews matter, but optimization matters too.
And most contractors underestimate how much local visibility affects call volume.
6. Lead Tracking Is Completely Broken
This is one of the most frustrating parts of contractor marketing.
Many business owners cannot answer basic questions like:
- Which channel generates the best leads?
- Which campaign produces booked jobs?
- Which keywords drive calls?
- What is the actual cost per lead?
Sometimes there is no tracking at all.
Other times, the tracking is partially installed and reporting bad data.
Without proper call tracking, decisions become guesswork.
That usually leads to contractors either:
- Overspending on channels that do not work
- Cutting campaigns that were actually profitable
Good marketing is not just about generating leads. It is about understanding where those leads come from.
7. The Contractor Is Invisible in Nearby Cities
This happens all the time.
A contractor might dominate one city but disappear completely 15 miles away.
Why?
Because they have:
- No localized pages
- No geo-targeted SEO strategy
- No local backlinks
- Weak map visibility outside their core city
Most contractors underestimate how hyperlocal Google search has become.
If you serve multiple cities, your marketing needs to reflect that.
Otherwise, competitors will own those surrounding markets.
8. Nobody Is Following Up Fast Enough
This is the silent revenue killer.
We audit lead response systems constantly, and many contractors are taking:
- 30 minutes
- 2 hours
- Sometimes an entire day
to respond to inbound leads.
At that point, the homeowner has already contacted 3 competitors.
Response speed matters more than most contractors realize.
The companies winning right now are usually not the cheapest. They are simply the fastest to respond.
This is especially true for Google Ads and Local Services Ads leads where intent is extremely high.
9. Marketing Feels Random Instead of Strategic
This is the biggest pattern we see overall.
Many contractors are doing disconnected activities:
- Running ads
- Posting on social media
- Paying for SEO
- Asking for reviews
- Sending mailers
But none of it works together.
There is no system.
Strong contractor marketing works like a flywheel:
- SEO builds long-term visibility
- Google Ads creates immediate lead flow
- Reviews improve conversion rates
- Content builds trust
- Tracking improves decision making
- Fast response closes more jobs
When these pieces work together, lead generation becomes predictable.
That is the real goal.
Final Thoughts
Most contractor marketing problems are fixable.
The issue is not usually effort.
It is direction.
A good audit helps identify where leads are leaking, where money is being wasted, and where opportunities are hiding.
And honestly, most contractors are closer than they think.
Sometimes, a few strategic fixes can completely change lead flow within months.
Especially now, as AI reshapes how homeowners search for contractors online.
The companies adapting to AI-driven SEO early are creating a major advantage for themselves while competitors continue using outdated tactics.
That window will not stay open forever.
That is why audits matter.
Before you spend more money on marketing, you need to understand what is actually broken first.

