
Many contractors believe growth only comes from spending more money on advertising.
But according to Daniel Dixon, that mindset leaves a LOT of money on the table.
In this episode, Daniel joins Dominic Rubino to explain why the smartest contractors focus less on chasing cold leads and more on maximizing the value of their existing customer base.
Most contractors work hard to build a database of customers over many years.
But after the project is complete?
They rarely follow up.
Daniel explains that existing customers:
That means selling to them again costs MUCH less than finding brand-new customers.
One of the smartest strategies discussed in the episode was “heat map marketing.”
The idea is simple:
If someone hires you for a renovation, kitchen, flooring project, painting job, or roof replacement…
…the neighbors are probably great prospects too.
Why?
Because neighbors often have:
Daniel shared how focusing heavily on one neighborhood helped build strong visibility and referrals in his early carpet cleaning business.
Daniel and Dom also discussed “guerrilla marketing.”
This means using smart, low-cost strategies that larger competitors often ignore.
Examples include:
Simple actions like these create trust fast — often at a fraction of the cost of digital ads.
One of the best lessons from the episode:
A customer saying “No” today does NOT mean “No forever.”
People delay projects because:
Contractors who stay in touch consistently often win those projects months later.
Many contractors think success means:
“Get more leads.”
But Daniel explains the better goal is:
👉 Get BETTER leads.
The right customers:
That’s where strong follow-up systems and customer marketing really matter.
This episode is packed with practical contractor marketing strategies that work in the real world.
Whether you run:
…the lessons apply directly to your business.
Listen to the full episode to learn how smarter follow-up and customer marketing can grow your company WITHOUT depending only on paid ads.
Listen to the full episode and learn how to turn trade shows into consistent leads.
More about Daniel Dixon: LinkedIn | Facebook
Company's Linkedin: LinkedIn