Marketing ideas for a new pressure washing business (without paying an agency) A lot of the lead sites (Bark, JobQuote etc.) are a race to the bottom on price, so you’ll often get timewasters and people comparing 5 quotes. Keep them ticking over, but shift your focus to local intent and trust signals so you’re not competing purely on “cheapest”.
1) Tighten your offer and pricing so it’s easier to say yes People “budge” at price when they’re unsure what they’re getting or they’re comparing to a bloke with a jet wash. Package it clearly: “Driveway clean + re-sand + seal (optional)” with a from-price per m² and a minimum call-out (e.g. £XX). Give 3 options (Basic / Standard / Premium) so you’re not defending one number. Add proof: before/after photos, short reviews, and a simple guarantee (e.g. “If you’re not happy, it gets re-done”).
2) Get Google working properly (free, but needs setup) Set up/optimise
Google Business Profile and post weekly photos. Ask every happy customer for a review with the service + area mentioned (“patio cleaned in Sutton”). Create 3–6 service pages on your site targeting areas you actually serve (e.g. “Driveway cleaning in [Town]”). Make sure your phone number is click-to-call and you’ve got a quick quote form.
3) Local lead generation that costs little - Leaflet 200–500 homes where you’ve just done a job (same street converts best).
- Knock 5 neighbours with a clipboard and offer a “same-day neighbourhood discount”.
- Facebook local groups: post before/after, not “DM me” spam. Offer 5 slots for a specific day in a specific area.
- Partner with landscapers, window cleaners, gardeners—pay a fixed referral fee per booked job.
If you share your town/area, typical job types (drives/patios/decking) and your current pricing structure, it’s possible to suggest a simple package and script that stops the price objections.