The economics
Buy the job, not the click.
Advertising rents attention from people who may never hire you. We hand you a specific commercial property, a reason its owner is deciding on vendors right now, and everything you need to go win it — for less than one afternoon of ad spend.
The math, side by side
A commercial service contract runs years, not visits. What matters is what you pay to land one.
- • Commercial service keywords typically cost $10–$30 a click, and it usually takes dozens of clicks to produce one inquiry — a raw inquiry commonly lands at $150–$400+ before you've spoken to anyone.
- • Most of those inquiries are residential, price-shopping, or out of your area. Big lead platforms resell the same homeowner to four or five companies at once — you pay to enter a bidding war.
- • Ads only reach people already searching. Commercial property owners rarely search — service contracts change hands through events, not Google.
- • The meter never stops: pause the spend and the pipeline dies the same week. Close one in eight paid inquiries and your acquisition cost sits around $1,500–$3,000 per won job.
- • Sheets run $39–$129 by contract size — priced off our aerial measurement of the actual property, typically an $8,000–$25,000+ per year recurring contract.
- • Every sheet answers the only question that matters: why would this owner hire someone now? You're not cold-calling a list — you're walking into an open decision.
- • Capped at 3 companies* — or take it exclusive from $225 and it's closed to your competitors permanently.
- • Close one sheet in ten at $79 and your acquisition cost is about $790 for a multi-year contract — under 7% of first-year revenue, a few percent over the life of the contract. That ratio is what ads can't touch.
Ad figures are typical industry ranges for commercial service categories; your market may vary. Contract values are our measured estimates, not guarantees. *Terms
Show up before the search happens
By the time a property manager is openly soliciting bids, every competitor you have is in the room. You compete at the moment of maximum competition, and the job goes to whoever cuts margin deepest. Your pipeline is a function of luck, season, and someone else's timing.
Vendor decisions happen at knowable moments — a sale closes, a business opens, a citation lands. Reach the owner inside that window and you're often the only bidder at the table. Same job, no bidding war, full-margin pricing. Your pipeline becomes a function of how many windows you work — a number you control.
Why we only sell high-intent moments
A list tells you a property exists. A signal tells you its owner is deciding. We only put a job on the shelf when something has forced the question:
New owners re-bid their vendors in the first year. The incumbent — if there is one — is beatable right now.
First contracts are being signed in the weeks before the doors open. Whoever shows up gets considered.
Overgrowth, dumping, nuisance — the owner is required to arrange service, usually within days. The most urgent signal there is.
Distressed properties need cleanup now, and the next owner re-bids everything. Forced action on both sides of the sale.
A brand-new property's first service contracts haven't been won by anyone — in any trade. Get on the bidder list before it opens.
Government grounds work with hard deadlines — multi-year money most small companies never hear about in time.
Then we do the estimator's homework before you spend a minute: verify it's a real commercial parcel, measure the property from the air, size the contract, find the owner and the decision window, and write the intro letter. One page, ready to act on.
Run the math on one job
Your first job sheet is free — no card, 30 seconds. If the numbers on it don't beat your cost per lead, you've lost nothing.
Claim your free sheetEvery job capped at 3 companies*. *Terms