Paid Search

Google Will Spend Your Money Either Way. Make Sure It Buys The Calls You Actually Want.

Google Ads and LSA can work for garage door companies. The account has to be managed around door replacements, opener installs, and commercial door work, the service areas you can actually serve, and calls your team can answer before the next contractor gets them.

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Cincinnati Door & Opener

Cincinnati Door & Opener

Why this matters

Paid search feels expensive when the wrong calls teach the account

Google can find people searching right now. It can also spend your budget on minor sensor fixes, wrong-area calls, and broad searches that were never going to become good work. For garage door companies, paid search has to be managed around job mix, service area, answer speed, and follow-up, not just the ad account.

Who this is for

Clicks can look fine while the wrong calls drain the budget

The ad account is only one part of the job. Search terms, locations, landing pages, answer speed, and follow-up all affect whether spend turns into real work.

Not a fit when

  • Broad keywords and wrong-area calls draining budget
  • LSA treated like a guaranteed lead source
  • Ads judged by leads without checking the calls
  • Landing pages disconnected from the job behind the search

Strong fit when

  • Search terms, locations, and negatives managed around calls worth buying
  • LSA used where eligibility, dispute rules, and answer speed make sense
  • Calls and forms reviewed for job type, area, answer speed, and follow-up
  • Ad groups tied to pages that match the buyer problem

How this works

How this works: control what Google is allowed to chase

Paid search gets better when the ad account, page, phone, and report all agree on what a good call looks like.

01

Define the target job

We separate door replacements, opener installs, and commercial door work from parts-only callers, wrong-area calls, warranty confusion, price-only shoppers, and unbooked repair calls before judging success.

02

Constrain the account

Search terms, negatives, geography, schedules, and LSA settings are narrowed around useful calls.

03

Follow the call

The budget decision comes from what happened after the click: call fit, answer speed, page match, and next-step status.

04

Check the demand

We look at service mix, search volume, competition, and budget before recommending scale.

05

Tighten Targeting

Keywords, negatives, locations, schedules, and LSA settings are tuned against the target job profile.

What you get

What we manage

The deliverable is a paid-search account that is easier to judge and harder to waste.

Altech Doors

Altech Doors

Boundary

When this is not first

If the site cannot convert, the phone is not answered, or follow-up is invisible, paid search can amplify the leak. Fix the page, phone, form, and follow-up before scaling spend.

Related work

This works best when the nearby pages, calls, reviews, and follow-up are clean enough to support it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Practical questions before this belongs in the plan

Do Google Ads and LSA still work for garage door companies?+

Google Ads and LSA can still work, but they are unforgiving. A garage door buyer with a broken spring or stuck door moves fast, and LSA can mix good repair calls with invalid calls, warranty confusion, wrong-area calls, and price-only shoppers. The account has to be managed around categories, zip codes, review strength, answer speed, dispute discipline, and whether calls became booked jobs. More calls only help when the office can answer and book the right ones.

Across 80+ garage door clients, the same pattern keeps showing up. Answer speed, review strength, Maps position, LSA fit, booked-call rate, and replacement follow-up decide whether call volume turns into work. The review looks at spring repair, opener repair, off-track doors, replacement doors, LSA categories, invalid-call disputes, and zip-code coverage. Then we decide whether more spend, more pages, or a follow-up fix should come first.

If reviews are weak, the phone is missed, or technicians cannot take more calls, more paid demand may only create waste.

Are these shared leads from Yelp, Angi, Thumbtack, or another lead seller?+

No. The goal is not to resell the same inquiry to multiple contractors. The work is built around your own calls, pages, reviews, service areas, and follow-up.

Bad-fit examples include parts-only callers, wrong-area calls, warranty confusion, price-only shoppers, invalid LSA calls, and unbooked repair calls. Those can make a lead report look busy while the owner feels the crew or office wasting time.

Shared-lead sites and local search competitors are part of the market, but they should not become the plan. The plan should make it clearer which calls are yours, which jobs fit, and what needs follow-up.

Can this help with replacement or commercial door work, not just repair calls?+

It can support the jobs you want: spring repairs, off-track doors, opener installs, replacement doors, commercial doors, planned maintenance, and repair calls that deserve replacement follow-up. Marketing still cannot force a job mix the market, reviews, photos, capacity, or follow-up cannot support.

The first question is whether the right buyers can see that you handle the work, trust the examples, and reach someone who knows what to do next.

For Garage Door Marketers, that means reviewing zip codes, truck coverage, after-hours capacity, review strength, and whether the job can be booked profitably. It also means checking the pages buyers land on, the calls that came in, and the follow-up after the first conversation. If the basics are missing, we say that before pretending one service will magically create better jobs.

How do you decide whether a lead is actually good?+

A good lead is not just someone who filled out a form. For a garage door company, it has to fit the service, area, timing, budget, and capacity of the company.

We look for the difference between wanted work and bad-fit inquiries. Wanted work includes spring repairs, off-track doors, opener installs, replacement doors, commercial doors, planned maintenance, and repair calls that deserve replacement follow-up. Bad-fit examples include parts-only callers, wrong-area calls, warranty confusion, price-only shoppers, invalid LSA calls, and unbooked repair calls.

Then we look at what happened after the inquiry came in. Was it answered, booked, estimated, followed up, or lost?

This is where many agencies stop too early. They count the form or phone event. Owners care about whether the call or estimate had a real chance to become work.

What budget do we need, and how fast can this help?+

Budget depends on truck capacity, market competition, LSA availability, repair/replacement mix, answer speed, and how much follow-up already happens after the first call. There is no honest answer without looking at the market, current calls, pages, reviews, and follow-up.

A company with strong reviews, clear pages, good answer speed, and a tight service area can often use budget better. Weak photos, thin reviews, and missed calls make the same spend less useful.

Speed also depends on the service. Paid search can move faster than SEO. Reviews and local trust compound more slowly. Follow-up fixes can help quickly if good calls are already being missed. The market report is meant to separate those cases before money is committed.

What if our office misses calls or follow-up is inconsistent?+

Then that has to be treated as part of the marketing problem. A spring repair call comes in while a technician is on a job, nobody answers fast enough, and the homeowner books whoever looks safest in Maps.

More demand will not fix that by itself. It may just make the miss more expensive.

The plan should show where calls, forms, texts, booked status, estimate status, reviews, and follow-up are getting lost. Sometimes the first win is not a new ad. It is making sure the best current inquiries get answered, marked correctly, and followed up while the buyer still cares.

What if we already have a general marketing vendor, a lead seller, Yelp, Angi, an LSA-only setup, or an old website vendor?+

That does not automatically mean you need to start over. The better question is what is working, what is unproven, and what the owner still cannot see.

We look at the current pages, ads, Maps presence, reviews, calls, forms, and follow-up before recommending a replacement.

If the existing setup is producing the right work and the reporting is clear, we should not disturb it.

Bad-fit examples include parts-only callers, wrong-area calls, warranty confusion, price-only shoppers, invalid LSA calls, and unbooked repair calls. If those are hidden next to missed calls, weak reviews, thin job examples, or quiet follow-up, the fix should be specific instead of another broad vendor swap.

When should a garage door company fix something else first?+

If reviews are weak, the phone is missed, or technicians cannot take more calls, more paid demand may only create waste.

This also may not be right if the owner wants guaranteed volume regardless of budget, market, reviews, capacity, or answer speed.

Garage Door Marketers is a better fit when the owner wants a clear read on broken spring calls, stuck-door calls, opener questions, replacement estimates, LSA calls, and after-hours messages. The goal is to find the jobs worth chasing and the places where follow-up, reviews, or job examples are costing money.

If the company is not ready to answer calls, review job fit, provide job photos or reviews, or fix obvious sales-process problems, the work will have a lower ceiling.

Find the waste before increasing spend

We will review search terms, service fit, landing pages, and call handling before recommending more budget.

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