For landscapers

Pay-per-call landscaping leads,
in plain English.

Landscaping customers don't book through email. They have a problem they need solved this week, often this day, and they want to talk to a human. Pay-per-call delivers that exact moment: a homeowner ready to schedule, on the phone, asking what you charge and when you can come. The form fills that competitors fight over? They're on TikTok by the time they get called back. The calls you get? They're choosing between you and the next contractor who answers.

~6 minute read · Last updated 2026-05-07

What kind of calls you'll get

The campaign targets landscaping-intent searches — homeowners actively looking to hire someone, not researching brand pages or browsing options. Calls usually involve one of these services:

  • Lawn maintenance & mowing
  • Landscape design & installation
  • Mulching & bed cleanup
  • Sod installation
  • Irrigation system install & repair
  • Hardscaping & paver installation
  • Seasonal cleanups

You opt into the specific services you want during signup. If you only do lawn maintenance & mowing and not seasonal cleanups, just check the boxes that match. Out-of-scope calls (a customer asking about something you don't do) aren't billable — dispute and we refund.

Will pay-per-call make landscapers money?

The honest answer is: it depends on three numbers — your average job value, your gross margin after parts and labor, and your close rate on qualified calls. The break-even per-call price is:

Break-even per call = Avg job × Gross margin % × Close rate

The reason the math works for landscapers specifically: Same-week scheduling: customer needs the job done now, often within days, willing to pay reasonable urgency premium. That intent profile is what makes per-call pricing profitable. Form-fill leads at the same dollar cost convert at a fraction of the rate because the customer is no longer on the phone by the time you call back.

We give you your exact per-call price during signup based on your service area and selected services. You can run the math yourself before you put a dollar in.

Why this beats shared landscaping leads from Angi

Angi (and HomeAdvisor and Thumbtack) sell each landscaping lead to four to seven contractors at once. You get a notification, you race the others to call the homeowner, and you usually lose because the homeowner answered the first contractor and stopped picking up. Pay-per-call is the inverse: the call rings only your phone. The customer is calling you because they saw your tracking number on a landing page that mentions landscaping. There is no race. There is no shared queue. Read the full math comparison at pay-per-call vs Angi.

How it actually works for you

  1. You sign up. Five-minute form. Tell us your business name, services you opt into, service area, hours. Refundable deposit (recommend $500-1,000 to start).
  2. We build your campaign. Your own dedicated tracking number, a landing page targeting landscaping intent, paid ads in your service area. Live within one business day.
  3. Your phone rings. Real homeowners calling about landscaping jobs. You answer like any other call. We bill per qualified call.
  4. You pause or quit anytime. No contract, no monthly fee. Refunds back to your card if you have unused balance when you leave.

Who shouldn't use pay-per-call landscaping leads

We'd rather lose a sale than waste your money. Pay-per-call is wrong for some landscapers. Specifically:

  • You can't reliably answer the phone during business hours. A call you don't answer is a wasted opportunity. Set up an answering service first or you'll burn deposit money.
  • You're already at full capacity. If you're turning down jobs, you don't need more leads. Hire first.
  • Your average landscaping job is small (<$150) and your close rate is below 25%. The math gets thin at low ticket sizes — you'd need very low per-call pricing to make it work.
  • You're in a hyper-niche corner of the trade with very low search demand. Pay-per-call requires somebody is searching. If only a handful of people in your area search for what you do, no marketing model fixes that.

Landscaping contractor questions

Landscaping is extremely seasonal — can I pause in winter? +

Yes. Pause the moment your schedule fills up or the season slows down. No monthly fee burns while you're idle. Your deposit stays on account — restart in spring with one click.

Can I get design & install calls versus maintenance-only calls? +

Yes — these are separate opt-ins. Landscape design and installation jobs are higher-ticket calls priced accordingly. Lawn maintenance calls are a different bucket entirely. Pick what matches your business model.

Do you cover commercial landscaping, or residential only? +

V1 of our system is tuned for residential homeowner intent. Commercial bids run on longer timelines and different buying signals. If you do both, tell us during signup — we'll set honest expectations about what volume to expect from each.

About Get That Phone Ringing

Get That Phone Ringing is operated by Gump Global LLC, a US-based pay-per-call lead-generation company. We've spent millions of dollars buying and routing pay-per-call traffic for home-service contractors since 2024 — across plumbing, HVAC, electrical, roofing, pest control, and a dozen other home-service verticals. We write about contractor marketing because most "expert" advice in the space comes from agencies and SaaS companies that don't actually run the campaigns or pay the ad invoices.

More about us →

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Five-minute sign-up. Refundable deposit. Live within one business day. No contract, no monthly fee — pay only when a real landscaping call comes in.

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