Most business owners already know that digital marketing matters, but keeping up with how it actually works in practice is a different challenge. The platforms change, consumer behavior shifts, and tactics that drove results a few years ago can quietly stop performing without much warning. If your marketing strategy hasn't had a serious look lately, there is a good chance it is leaving opportunities on the table.
The good news is that you do not need to overhaul everything at once. There are a few foundational areas where modernizing your approach tends to produce the clearest, most consistent results. Here are three worth focusing on.
Website visitors expect fast answers, and when they do not get them, they move on. A chatbot gives your website the ability to respond to inquiries around the clock, even when your team is off the clock, handling a job, or simply unavailable. For home service businesses in particular, after-hours inquiries are some of the most valuable leads you can capture, and without an automated response, those visitors often just close the tab and call someone else.
We saw this dynamic play out firsthand with Loyal Termite & Pest Control, one of our earliest clients to add live chat to their website. When Loyal launched the feature in 2010, the setup routed incoming chat requests directly to a customer service rep, essentially ringing the office the moment someone typed a message. It worked, but it depended entirely on someone being available to answer. Today's AI-powered chatbot systems are an entirely different tool. They can handle a large share of common customer service interactions independently, qualify leads, book appointments, and route more complex questions to a human when needed, all without tying up staff.
You can read more about Loyal's full growth story and how a long-term digital strategy helped them scale from five employees to an acquisition by an international pest control company.
Beyond availability, modern chatbots add real value in a few specific ways:
Video has moved well past the category of "emerging trend" and into something closer to table stakes for digital marketing. According to Wyzowl's 2026 State of Video Marketing report, 91% of businesses now use video as a marketing tool, and 82% of marketers report a positive return on investment from video content. Perhaps more telling: 85% of consumers say a video has directly convinced them to buy a product or service.
The reason video works so well comes down to how it communicates. It is easier to show what you do than to describe it, and for service businesses, that difference matters. A short video of a technician walking through a pest treatment, or a cleaning crew completing a job, conveys professionalism and process far more efficiently than a paragraph of text. It also gives potential customers a sense of who they are inviting into their home, which is a real consideration in service-based industries.
You do not need a production crew to get started. Some of the most effective service business videos are filmed on a smartphone, edited simply, and posted consistently. A few formats worth considering:
Running ads is not the same as running effective ads. The difference is in how precisely those ads reach the right people, with a message that feels relevant to where they are in their decision-making process. Broad, untargeted advertising wastes budget on people who are not ready to buy, not in your service area, or simply not a fit for what you offer.
The numbers make the case clearly. According to Attentive's 2025 Consumer Trends Report, 81% of consumers ignore irrelevant marketing messages entirely, while 96% say they are likely to purchase from a brand that sends them personalized messaging. That gap is significant. The same ad budget can produce drastically different results depending on how well it is targeted.
Modern advertising platforms give you the tools to be genuinely specific about who sees your ads. That includes targeting by location, service type, device, time of day, and past behavior on your website. Retargeting, in particular, is one of the more underused options for service businesses. When someone visits your site but does not convert, a well-timed retargeting ad can bring them back at the right moment.
A few ways targeted advertising tends to work best for home service businesses:
If you are not sure where to start with paid advertising, it helps to understand the differences between platforms. Google Ads and Facebook Ads each serve different parts of the customer journey, and knowing which one fits your goal makes a meaningful difference in what you spend and what you get back.
Chatbots, video, and targeted advertising are not complicated concepts, but putting them into practice in a way that actually moves the needle takes time, experience, and consistent attention. That is exactly what Advanté-BCS is here to handle. We work with home service businesses to build marketing systems that run in the background while you focus on the work in front of you.
If you are ready to take a closer look at what a modernized strategy could mean for your business, contact our team or request a quote to get started.