Three landscaping homepage directions
One page can sell a polished design-build studio, a dark luxury outdoor-living brand, or a brighter lawn-and-landscape company without making each visitor read the same generic pitch.
Tell us whether the landscaper needs more design-build projects, irrigation and drainage work, maintenance plans, or outdoor-living leads.
A landscaper page should make the yard feel beautiful fast, then prove the company understands what protects that beauty: drainage, grading, irrigation, soil, plant choice, lighting, and seasonal care.
One page can sell a polished design-build studio, a dark luxury outdoor-living brand, or a brighter lawn-and-landscape company without making each visitor read the same generic pitch.
Best for landscapers, outdoor-living builders, hardscape crews, irrigation companies, lawn-care brands, and design-build firms that need the page to sell both the dream and the technical confidence behind it.
The visitor should picture the finished yard, but the page should also show that the company thinks about runoff, slope, plant survival, irrigation coverage, night use, and long-term upkeep.
Patios, pergolas, fire features, kitchens, turf, planting beds, and lighting create the emotional pull. Drainage, grading, soil prep, irrigation zones, and maintenance expectations create the confidence to request a quote.
A homeowner asking for weekly care, a new sprinkler system, and a full backyard build are not making the same decision.
Spring cleanups, summer irrigation, fall prep, snow-season planning, and plant health give the page useful detail beyond pretty photos.
Landscaping visitors are often buying more than plants. They are buying a place to host, relax, cook, cool down, sit by a fire, or finally make the front of the home feel finished.
Call out drainage, slope, downspout paths, low spots, and hardscape runoff so the page feels competent before it feels decorative.
Show that the company thinks about zones, sun exposure, turf, beds, shrubs, trees, and how the yard will survive after install day.
Night photos, path lighting, patio lighting, and pool or fire-feature scenes help outdoor living feel more valuable.
Keep lawn care, cleanups, pruning, mulch, and seasonal service easy to find without flattening the premium design-build offer.
Yes. The page can separate outdoor living, hardscape, irrigation, planting, lawn care, and seasonal maintenance so each visitor finds the right path quickly.
Yes. Landscaping buyers care about beauty, but they also need confidence that grading, drainage, irrigation, soil, and plant health were considered before the project starts.
Yes. Strong imagery, project proof, lighting scenes, patios, pergolas, kitchens, fire features, and before-and-after context can make the value feel clear before the quote request.
Yes. The page can keep the form simple while still giving larger design-build visitors room to describe goals, budget, timeline, and the type of outdoor space they want.