How to Get More Leads for Your General Contractor Business (2026)
The contractor lead-gen tactics that actually book jobs — ranked by ROI, not by what's trendy.
The biggest wins are operational, not just more ads: respond to every lead in under five minutes, stop missing calls (studies suggest businesses miss a large share of them), follow up on every quote until you get an answer, and reactivate past customers and dead quotes. Seal those leaks first — then paid channels like Google Local Services Ads pay back far better.
Why contractor companies lose leads (before spending more on ads)
Most contractor owners assume the fix for slow months is "more marketing." Usually it isn't. The leads are already coming in — they're leaking out through three gaps:
- Missed calls become missed work. Studies suggest small businesses miss a large share of inbound calls — figures around 40–60% are commonly cited. Remodels and builds are high-ticket and high-consideration — a slow or missed reply costs you five-figure jobs to the contractor who answered.
- Slow response kills conversion. Most businesses lose about half their leads simply by being slow — a lead contacted in the first minute books far more often than one called back hours later.
- Nobody follows up. The estimate you sent Tuesday is cold by Friday, and with no time to chase, a steady share of contractor revenue just walks.
7 ways to get more contractor leads (ranked by ROI)
Respond to every lead in under 5 minutes
Speed to contact wins deals. Whether it comes from your website, a call, or a form, get a call, text, or email out in under a minute — around the clock. This single change usually recovers more revenue than any new ad campaign.
Stop missing calls — answer 24/7
After-hours and weekends are when contractor customers are searching and calling around. A 24/7 receptionist (human or AI), or at minimum missed-call text-back, means every caller gets answered, qualified, and booked instead of hitting voicemail.
Follow up on every quote until you get an answer
Set a multi-touch sequence — call, text, email — over days and weeks until they book or opt out. Bids don't close themselves; persistence does.
Reactivate past customers and dead quotes
You're sitting on a list that already trusts you. Win-back offers and seasonal reminders turn old customers and stale quotes into booked work at near-zero acquisition cost.
Get and manage reviews
Local buyers pick the contractor company with more, better, recent reviews. Ask happy customers at the right moment, intercept unhappy ones before they post, and reply to every review — your reputation compounds and feeds every other channel.
Run Google Local Services Ads + a fast website
LSA puts you at the top with the "Google Guaranteed" badge and pay-per-lead pricing. Pair it with a fast site built around what customers actually type ("general contractor near me," "kitchen remodel [city]"), wired so a form fill becomes a booked job in under a minute.
Capture website and social visitors
Most visitors leave without calling. A website chat assistant and quick replies to Instagram and Facebook DMs catch the ones who'd otherwise bounce — and route them straight into your follow-up.
The highest-leverage move
If you do nothing else, fix response time and call coverage — those two decide whether the leads you already pay for turn into booked jobs. The hard part is needing someone available instantly, 24/7, which is exactly the work that's easy to automate. That's what AgentSurge does for contractor businesses: an AI receptionist answers your phones around the clock, a speed-to-lead agent contacts every new lead in under 60 seconds, and follow-up, reactivation, and reviews run on autopilot. You can try the live agent before you book a call.
Get more contractor leads FAQ
How do contractor companies get more leads?
The highest-ROI moves are operational: respond to every new lead in under five minutes, stop missing inbound calls (studies suggest businesses miss a large share of them), follow up on every quote until you get an answer, and reactivate past customers and dead quotes. Paid channels like Google Local Services Ads work better once those leaks are sealed.
How fast should I respond to a contractor lead?
Within five minutes — ideally under one. Lead-response research popularized by Harvard Business Review found that responding within five minutes makes you far more likely to reach and qualify a lead than waiting even 30 minutes. After-hours matters most, because that's when customers are calling around.
Do I need an answering service or AI receptionist?
If you miss calls — especially after hours — yes. Every missed call is a job a competitor takes. A 24/7 AI receptionist (or at minimum missed-call text-back) answers, qualifies, books, and texts you a summary. It's cheaper than a part-time receptionist (about $2,800–$3,500/month) and never clocks out.
How much do contractor leads cost?
Paid contractor leads typically run from about $40 to $500+ depending on channel, season, and market. The cheaper path to a lower cost per job is closing more of the leads you already get — speed and follow-up beat buying more leads you don't call back.
What's the best way to follow up with contractor leads?
Multi-touch, multi-channel, and automatic — call, text, and email over days and weeks until they respond or opt out — plus reactivating old quotes and past customers with seasonal offers.
Sources
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