TLDR;
- Most local service businesses fail with Meta ads because they treat them like Google Ads. Meta is for creating demand for "want" services (like a kitchen remodel), not capturing urgent "need" services (like a burst pipe).
- Your website is probably losing you money. Before you spend a penny on ads, you must fix your site so it builds trust with clear calls-to-action, social proof (reviews!), and fast loading times.
- The best targeting strategy isn't complex interest layering; it's a simple funnel. Use broad location targeting for inspiring video ads (Top of Funnel), then retarget viewers and website visitors with direct offers (Middle & Bottom of Funnel).
- "Request a Quote" is a terrible offer for social media. You need a lower-friction offer like a free design mockup, a downloadable guide, or an instant online estimate to get people to respond.
- This guide includes an interactive Lead Value Calculator to help you figure out exactly how much you can afford to pay for a lead and still be profitable.
I see this all the time. A local service business owner, brilliant at their trade—be it plumbing, kitchen fitting, or photography—decides to try Meta ads. They boost a few posts, spend a few hundred quid, get a handful of likes from their mum and her mates, but the phone doesn't ring. Their conclusion? "Facebook ads don't work for businesses like mine."
And they're right, but for the wrong reason. The way most service businesses use Meta ads is a complete waste of money. They're trying to use a screwdriver to hammer in a nail. The problem isn't the tool; it's the total misunderstanding of what the tool is designed for.
Google Ads and Meta (Facebook/Instagram) Ads are not interchangeable. Failing to understand this is the single biggest reason your budget is evaporating with nothing to show for it. This guide is about fixing that. We're going to dismantle the common mistakes and build a simple, repeatable system that actually generates leads for local service businesses.
Why are my Meta Ads failing when Google Ads work?
Let's get this straight first. You need to seperate your services into two buckets: "Need" services and "Want" services.
"Need" services are emergency-driven. Nobody casually scrolls through Instagram and thinks, "You know what would be lovely? A burst pipe." When your boiler breaks in the dead of winter, you don't browse Facebook for inspiration. You go straight to Google and type "emergency plumber near me". This is demand capture. The need already exists, and your job is to be the first and most trustworthy solution they find. For these services, Google Ads is king. End of story.
"Want" services are aspirational. Nobody *needs* a vinyl-wrapped kitchen, a professionally detailed car, or a bathroom remodel tomorrow. They *want* it. They dream about it. They get inspired. They see their neighbour's new patio and feel a pang of envy. This is where Meta shines. It's a platform for demand generation. You aren't capturing an existing need; you are planting the seed of an idea and nurturing it into a sale. You're showing them what's possible and making them want it from *you*.
Many businesses, like a kitchen fitter, offer both. You might get emergency cabinet repair work from Google, but you'll get the full £20,000 kitchen remodel projects by inspiring someone on Instagram. The fatal mistake is using the same direct-response, "CALL NOW!" approach from your Google Ads on Meta. It just doesn't work. People aren't on social media with their credit card out, ready to buy. They're there to be entertained and distracted. Your job is to interrupt their scroll with something that sparks a desire. We've seen this time and again; understanding this fundamental difference is the first step toward making Meta a profitable channel. For a deeper look into this, we've got a whole guide on whether Facebook ads can work for home service businesses.
Is your website costing you leads before they even arrive?
Right, let's be brutally honest. You could have the best ads in the world, but if they lead to a slow, untrustworthy, and confusing website, you're just paying to annoy potential customers. I've audited hundreds of accounts, and I can tell you the number one point of failure isn't the ad, it's the landing page. It's like having a brilliant TV commercial for a shop with a boarded-up door.
Before you even think about opening Ads Manager, you need to fix your digital shopfront. Here’s what goes wrong:
- It looks unprofessional. Outdated design, blurry images, and spelling misteaks scream "cowboy builder". People are handing over thousands of pounds; they need to feel confident you're a serious, professional operation.
- There's no social proof. You say you're great, but who else does? Where are the reviews from happy customers? Where are the before-and-after photos of your actual work? Without these, you have zero credibility.
- It’s not clear what you want them to do. A potential customer lands on your page. What's the next step? Is there a big, obvious button that says "Get a Free Estimate"? Or is your phone number buried in the footer? If they have to think, they'll leave.
- It's slow as a snail. People on mobile have no patience. If your site takes more than three seconds to load, a huge chunk of your visitors—people you've paid to get there—will just hit the back button.
Fixing this is your top priority. Your website only needs to do three things well: build trust, show off your work, and make it incredibly easy to get in touch. Get professional photos of your work. Plaster testimonials and Google reviews everywhere. And make your call-to-action button the most unmissable thing on the page. Pouring ad spend into a bad website is like trying to fill a leaky bucket; you need to patch the holes first. Getting this foundation right is a core part of our complete lead generation guide for any local business.
How do I structure my campaigns for local services?
Okay, your website is sorted. Now, let's build a campaign structure that actually works for aspirational, "want" services. Forget complex targeting and dozens of ad sets. We're going to use a simple, logical funnel approach that guides a cold prospect from "just browsing" to "ready to buy."
Top of Funnel (ToFu): The Inspiration Stage
-> Goal: To stop the scroll and plant the seed of an idea. You are not selling here; you are inspiring.
-> Campaign Objective: Video Views or Engagement.
-> Audience: This is the controversial part. Don't use any interest targeting. Just target your location (e.g., a 10-15 mile radius around your service area) and let Meta's algorithm do the work. It's smarter than you think at finding people who will engage with your content.
-> Creative: This MUST be high-quality video. Not a slideshow with text. A beautifully shot time-lapse of a project, a "walkthrough" of a finished bathroom remodel, or a satisfying clip of a patio being pressure washed. It should be visually appealing and evoke a feeling of "I want that in my house." The budget here can be small, maybe £5-£10 a day.
Middle of Funnel (MoFu): The Consideration Stage
-> Goal: To re-engage the people who showed interest and introduce your company as the solution.
-> Campaign Objective: Traffic or Lead Generation.
-> Audience: Create a custom audience of people who watched at least 50% of your ToFu video in the last 30 days. These people have raised their hands and shown they're interested in what you do.
-> Creative: Now you can be a bit more direct. Use a carousel ad showcasing multiple before-and-after projects. Include a client testimonial in the ad copy. The call to action is still soft, something like "See More of Our Work" or "Download Our Style Guide." You're building trust and authority.
Bottom of Funnel (BoFu): The Conversion Stage
-> Goal: To get the lead from highly qualified prospects.
-> Campaign Objective: Leads or Sales (Conversions if your website is set up for it).
-> Audience: Create two custom audiences: 1) Website visitors from the last 90 days, and 2) People who engaged with your Instagram or Facebook page in the last 90 days. Exclude anyone who has already become a lead.
-> Creative: This is where you make your direct offer. "Ready to transform your kitchen? Get a free, no-obligation estimate today." Use a Facebook Lead Form to make it as easy as possible for them to give you their details without leaving the app. This reduces friction massively. A campaign like this is the perfect fix for those who are seeing low conversions on their ads for services like bathroom remodeling.
This structure works because it aligns with the customer's natural journey. It doesn't scream "BUY NOW" at cold traffic. It nurtures interest, builds trust, and then asks for the sale when the prospect is warm and ready.
Objective: Video Views
Audience: Broad Location (e.g., 15-mile radius)
Creative: High-quality, inspiring project video
Objective: Traffic / Lead Gen
Audience: Retarget 50% video viewers
Creative: Carousel of projects, testimonials
Objective: Leads (using Lead Forms)
Audience: Retarget website visitors & page engagers
Creative: Direct offer ("Get a Free Estimate")
Who should I actually target in my local area?
One of the biggest myths is that you need to find the perfect combination of interests to target. Business owners spend ages layering things like "Home Improvement," "DIY," and "HGTV," thinking they're creating a perfect audience. In reality, you're just telling Facebook to find people who once liked a page about gardening six years ago.
For local services, your strongest targeting tool is geography. Your ability to service a specific patch is your unique advantage.
Master Your Radius: Start with a sensible radius around your business address. If you're a plumber, maybe that's 10 miles. If you're a specialist kitchen fitter, maybe it's 30. Don't go too wide. It's better to dominate a smaller area than to spread your budget too thin over a massive one.
The "People Living In" Setting: This is critical. In your ad set's location settings, you MUST choose "People living in this location." The default includes "People living in or recently in this location," which means you'll waste money showing your ads to commuters, tourists, and delivery drivers who have no intention of hiring you. This single setting can often be the reason you find Facebook is giving you leads from way outside your target area.
When to Layer: The only time I'd consider layering interests or demographics on top of location is for very high-ticket, niche services. For example, if you build £100,000 home extensions, you might layer your location targeting with the top 10% of postcodes by income in your area. But for 95% of service businesses, a simple location + retargeting funnel is far more effective and cheaper than guessing interests.
What offer will actually get people to respond?
Here's another piece of tough love: your offer is probably boring. "Request a Quote" or "Contact Us for a Free Estimate" is the default for every service business on the planet. It's uninspired, high-friction, and screams "I'm about to get a sales pitch." On a platform like Meta, where you're competing with wedding photos and puppy videos, you need something more compelling.
Your offer’s job is to provide value upfront and make it a no-brainer for the prospect to take the next step. It needs to be lower friction.
Instead of "Request a Quote," try these:
- For remodelers/designers: "Get a Free 3D Design Mockup of Your New Kitchen." This is high value and feels tangible.
- For landscapers: "Download Our Free [Your City] Planting Guide for a Perfect Summer Garden." This captures leads and positions you as the expert.
- For cleaners/detailers: "Book Your First Clean and Get 20% Off." A simple, direct incentive works well for recurring services.
- For kitchen wrappers: "See 5 Kitchens We Transformed This Month (Lookbook Download)." This is a perfect example of an inspiring, low-friction offer that worked for a new kitchen wrapping company we advised.
- For any trade: An instant online estimator tool on your website. People love instant gratification. "Get a Ballpark Estimate in 60 Seconds."
The principle is simple: give them something of value in exchange for their contact details. A generic "contact us" form asks them to do all the work. A strong offer gives them a reason to act *now*. It moves you from being just another tradesperson to a helpful expert.
How much should I spend, and what results can I expect?
This is the ultimate "how long is a piece of string?" question. Your cost per lead (CPL) will depend on your service, your location, and your competition. However, you shouldn't be flying blind. You need to know your numbers to understand if your ads are actually profitable.
The most important metric isn't CPL; it's your Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) in relation to your Customer Lifetime Value (LTV). Let's break that down for a service business.
1. Calculate your Average Profit Per Job: Don't just look at revenue. What's the average value of a job, and what's your typical gross profit margin on it?
Example: A bathroom remodel is £8,000, and your gross margin is 30%. Your profit per job is £2,400.
2. Figure Out Your Lead-to-Close Rate: How many leads do you need to talk to, on average, to close one job? Be honest. If you close one out of every five qualified leads, your close rate is 20%.
3. Determine Your Maximum Affordable CPL: Now you can work backwards. If a job is worth £2,400 in profit, and you need 5 leads to get one job, you can afford to spend up to £480 per lead (£2,400 / 5) and still break even. Obviously, you want to be well below that to be profitable. A healthy target would be a 3:1 ratio, meaning you'd aim for a CPL of around £160 (£480 / 3).
Now, when you see a CPL of £50 from your Meta ads, you don't just think "that seems expensive." You know that for every £50 you spend, you're generating a lead that's potentially worth £480 in profit. That changes everything. It turns advertising from an expense into a predictable investment in growth.
We've seen CPLs range wildly. For one home cleaning client, we achieved a £5 cost per lead. For an HVAC company in a competitive area, it was closer to $60 per lead. Without knowing your numbers, you have no way of knowing if that's a bargain or a disaster.
What kind of ad images and videos actually work?
Please, for the love of god, stop using stock photos. Nothing screams "generic, untrustworthy business" more than a picture of a smiling model in a hard hat who has clearly never seen a building site in their life. Your potential customers can spot a fake a mile away.
Authenticity is your superpower. People want to see your *actual* work, done for *actual* customers in their *actual* local area.
Here’s what consistently works:
- Before-and-Afters are Gold: This is the single most powerful creative format for any business that transforms something. A grimy patio to a pristine one. An outdated kitchen to a modern masterpiece. A messy car to a showroom-clean one. Use a carousel ad or a simple video that swipes between the two. It's visual storytelling at its finest.
- Satisfying Time-lapses: Set up a phone on a tripod and record your process. A wall being painted, a driveway being laid, a car being detailed. Speed it up and you have compelling content that shows the effort and skill involved in your work.
- You and Your Team: Show the real people behind the business. A short video of you explaining a common problem, or a picture of your team after a finished job, builds trust and humanises your brand. People buy from people they like.
- Client Testimonial Videos: Ask a happy client if they'd be willing to say a few words on camera (their phone is fine!). A genuine, unscripted recommendation from a real person is more powerful than any slick ad you could ever create. For any business that requires trust, like wedding photography, this is non-negotiable.
For your ad copy, use the classic Problem-Agitate-Solve framework. It works because it taps directly into the customer's mindset.
Problem: State the pain point they're feeling. "Tired of looking at that outdated, cramped bathroom every morning?"
Agitate: Poke the bruise. Remind them why it's a problem. "It's more than just an eyesore - it's a frustrating start to your day and embarrassing when you have guests over."
Solve: Present your service as the clear solution. "We help homeowners in [Your City] create beautiful, functional bathrooms they love. Get a free design consultation and see what's possible."
This simple structure turns your ad from a boring announcement into a compelling message that resonates with a person's real frustrations and desires. We've seen it work wonders for businesses struggling with creating effective ads for services like car detailing.
Should I run these ads myself or hire an expert?
You've made it this far, and you now have a blueprint that puts you ahead of 90% of other local service businesses trying to use Meta ads. You absolutely can implement this yourself. It will take time, testing, and a willingness to learn from your mistakes.
But you also have a business to run. You have jobs to quote, work to complete, and customers to keep happy. The question becomes: is your time better spent becoming a mediocre ads manager or being an excellent business owner?
Working with an expert or an agency isn't about just handing over the keys. It's about partnering with someone who lives and breathes this stuff day in, day out. We've seen what works and what doesn't across dozens of different service industries. We can build the funnels, write the copy, analyse the data, and optimise the campaigns much faster and more effectively because it's all we do.
A good consultant won't just run your ads; they'll challenge your offer, help you understand your numbers, and build a predictable system for growth. They should be able to show you detailed case studies from businesses just like yours and be transparent about the results they've achieved.
The system I've laid out today is the foundation. It's a powerful start. But mastering it, scaling it, and ensuring it delivers a consistent, profitable return on your investment is a full-time job. If you're serious about making paid advertising a core pillar of your business's growth, it might be time to consider bringing in a specialist.
If you'd like an expert pair of eyes on your current strategy or want to discuss how this system could be implemented for your specific business, we offer a free, no-obligation strategy session where we can audit your existing efforts and map out a clear path forward.