A digital agency for landscapers.
Mule Digital builds websites for landscaping companies, lawn-care services, and outdoor-living contractors. Image-led sites that show real completed work, handle the spring-rush inquiry volume cleanly, and rank for the local searches that drive both maintenance accounts and high-margin design-build projects.
What we know about landscapers.
Landscaping has two distinct businesses inside one trade, recurring maintenance (mowing, fertilization, plowing) and design-build (patios, hardscape, full landscape installs). They want different things from a website. Maintenance buyers want pricing transparency and a fast inquiry-to-quote loop. Design-build buyers want portfolio photography, real examples of completed work in their area, and a sense of taste before they'll engage.
Most landscaping sites we audit collapse the two into a single homepage that does neither well. The maintenance buyer can't find pricing, the design-build buyer can't find a portfolio, and the site reads as generic to both. Splitting them, separate pages, separate inquiry flows, separate visual treatments, is most of the upgrade.
Why a landscaping company picks Mule.
- 01Separate maintenance and design-build sections with their own inquiry paths and content. They're different buyers.
- 02Real portfolio photography of completed work, your actual patios, your actual landscapes, your actual crew. We direct shoots locally.
- 03Spring-rush surge handling, fast pages and a structured inquiry form that captures property size and budget so quotes go out cleanly.
- 04Local SEO setup for the towns and neighbourhoods you serve, without publishing your shop address.
What landscapers usually need.
From landscapers.
Should we publish maintenance pricing?
Ranges by property size, yes, "under 1/4 acre," "1/4 to 1/2 acre," "1+ acre" with starting weekly rates. Transparency converts and filters out the wrong-fit inquiries. Specific quotes still need a site visit.
What about snow plowing in winter?
If you offer it, surface it as a seasonal service with separate pricing and contracts. Most northern landscapers underplay it on the website and lose to plowing-only specialists in winter search.
Do you integrate with our CRM, Jobber, LMN, Aspire?
Inquiry forms hand off to whichever you run. Deep job-management integration is usually overkill; the inquiry-to-CRM step is what we wire.
Should we have a blog?
For most landscapers, no. A clean services page, a strong portfolio, and an active GBP do more than a content mill. The exception is design-build operations where seasonal planting guides and project-process content earn high-intent research traffic.