Landscaping is a visual trade. Homeowners searching for someone to redesign their backyard or take over their lawn maintenance aren't calling the first result they see — they're comparing. They want to see photos, understand your process, and decide whether you look like someone they'd trust in their yard every fortnight.
A Google Business Profile can't do any of that. If you've been wondering whether tradespeople actually need websites, the answer is even more clear-cut for landscapers — because your work is visual, and photos sell.
What Google Maps actually does for landscapers
Your GMB listing puts you in the local pack. That's valuable — especially for "landscaper near me" searches. But when a homeowner clicks your name and finds a profile with a few photos and no website link, you've already lost ground to the landscaper next to you with a clean site, a portfolio organised by project type, and a quote form that works at any hour.
Google Maps is where the search ends. A website is where the decision gets made.
The jobs that go to whoever has a website
Full garden installs, ongoing maintenance contracts, commercial strata work — these are considered purchases. A homeowner planning a $5,000 garden redesign is not calling the first number they see. They're looking at photos. They're checking whether you've done similar work in their suburb. They're forming an opinion before they've spoken to you.
A landscaping business in Melbourne we worked with had decent GMB traffic but a low call-to-enquiry rate. Six weeks after launching a proper site — project gallery organised by type, a three-field quote form, and suburb-specific pages — consistent inbound enquiries started coming in without any ad spend.
What your site needs to actually convert
A project gallery with real work. Organised by type — lawn maintenance, garden design, retaining walls, irrigation. Not a random grid of photos. Homeowners want to find work that looks like what they need, quickly.
A quote form that asks the minimum. Name, phone, brief description of the job. Your goal is to start a conversation, not pre-qualify them.
Service area pages that actually rank. "Landscaping in Fitzroy, VIC" as a dedicated page will rank for that search. A footer mention of the suburb won't. Geo-specific pages are how landscapers take local search traffic away from aggregator sites like hipages and ServiceSeeking.
Mobile speed. Most local service searches happen on phones. A slow mobile site loses the job before the page finishes loading.
"I get most of my work from referrals"
Referrals mean your work is good. They're not a growth strategy. They don't scale when you want to take on a second crew. They don't protect you when a quiet winter hits. And referred customers still Google you before they call — if they find nothing, you've lost credibility before the first conversation.
A website doesn't replace referrals. It makes every referral more likely to convert, and it catches the jobs that referrals never reach. It's how other trades handle this same decision — and landscaping is no different.
The real cost of not having one
It's not the cost of building the site. It's the jobs that default to a competitor because you weren't in the search results, or you were but gave homeowners no reason to choose you over the landscaper with the clean portfolio and the easy quote form.
Landscaping is a recurring revenue trade. One client you didn't get because you had no site isn't one job — it's potentially years of maintenance.