Pest Control Marketing That Actually Works

Instagram Reels and Stories for Pest Control

14 min · 28 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Instagram Reels and Stories for Pest Control

Descripción

Instagram Reels are getting 5-10x more reach than photos right now—and pest control companies are perfectly positioned to take advantage. In this episode, social media manager Hannah Kilpatrick breaks down exactly what's working on Instagram for pest control operators in 2026. Here's why this matters: when you post a photo, Instagram shows it mainly to your existing followers. When you post a reel, the algorithm pushes it to people who've never heard of you. A pest control company with 300 followers can post a reel and get 2,000-5,000 views. That same company posts a photo and gets 50-100. The math is clear. We cover the five content types that perform best for pest control: Before-and-after treatments. Film the infestation, film the treatment, show the result. 30 seconds. This is your highest-performing category and it's almost unique to pest control. Quick educational tips. Answer questions customers actually ask—why ants invade in spring, how to identify termites, what attracts pests. Under 60 seconds. These get shared, which means free reach. Behind-the-scenes content. A day in the truck, what your techs carry, what an inspection looks like. Customers are curious about what they're paying for. Seasonal and timely content. Termite swarms in your area? Post about it that day. Local specificity beats generic pest content every time. Myth busting. Take common misconceptions about pest control—DIY treatments that don't work, home remedies people swear by—and debunk them in 45 seconds. We also tackle the practical stuff: how long reels should be (30-60 seconds), how to film them (just use the Instagram app), and how often to post (two per week is plenty). For operators who are camera-shy, we cover three approaches to creating content without being on screen. Then we get into Instagram Stories—which serve a completely different purpose. Reels find new people. Stories maintain relationships with people who already follow you. Think of it as reach versus retention. We cover what to post in stories (polls, questions, behind-the-scenes moments, direct CTAs with links) and how much time it should take (five minutes, tops). Key stats from this episode: * Reels get 5-10x more views than static posts * 30-60 seconds is the sweet spot for pest control reels * Two reels per week is enough for real growth * Post between 7-9 AM or 6-8 PM local time for best reach * Three to five stories per week keeps your account active Download our free Instagram Reels Idea Checklist at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai [http://marketingthatactuallyworks.ai]—30 reel ideas organized by content type so you never stare at a blank screen wondering what to post.

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23 episodios

episode The Truth About Facebook and Instagram Ads artwork

The Truth About Facebook and Instagram Ads

Did you spend $800 on Facebook ads and get zero leads? The problem probably isn't Facebook. It's what you asked Facebook to do. In this episode, Adam Bennett and Elisabeth Pallante are joined by Hannah Kilpatrick, Cube Creative's Social Media Manager, to break down what social ads actually do for pest control companies and why most pest control owners are measuring them wrong. You'll learn why Facebook and Instagram are farming, not hunting, why creative matters more than targeting, the three ad shapes that work consistently for pest control, how much a 5-truck company should spend per month, and the three downstream numbers worth watching instead of cost-per-click. Plus Hannah's one-thing-to-try-this-week experiment that costs $50 and tells you whether your social strategy has a chance. Get your free pest control marketing audit at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai [http://marketingthatactuallyworks.ai]. Score your website's AI search trust signals free at thecubescore.com [http://thecubescore.com].

9 de jun de 202611 min
episode Summer Marketing Strategy — Staying Visible in the Off-Season artwork

Summer Marketing Strategy — Staying Visible in the Off-Season

Summer is when most pest control operators make their biggest marketing mistake. The trucks are full, the phones are ringing, and it feels like the right time to pause marketing and save the budget. But that pause creates a revenue cliff that hits hard in September and October. In this episode, Adam Bennett and Elisabeth Pallante break down why going dark on marketing during busy season is the most expensive cycle in pest control, and what to do instead. They walk through the real cost of stopping and restarting: Google Ads campaigns that lose their optimization data, SEO rankings that slip while competitors keep publishing, and referral pipelines that dry up when customers stop hearing from you. The numbers are clear. Restarting a paused ad campaign costs 30 to 50 percent more per lead during the ramp-up period. Adam and Elisabeth lay out three practical summer strategies that keep your pipeline full without eating into field time. First, a seasonal content plan that turns active pest problems into blog posts and social content that drives traffic today and builds SEO authority for next year. Second, a fall pre-sell strategy using email campaigns to book rodent exclusion, wildlife prevention, and other fall services before the summer ends. They share a real client example: one August email offering 10 percent off fall rodent exclusion booked 40 jobs in three weeks. Third, three low-effort automated systems, Google Business Profile posts, automated review requests, and a lead nurture drip sequence, that run in the background while you focus on the work. The episode also covers renewal campaign timing, how to turn one blog post into a week of social media content, and why summer is actually the best time to market because your competitors have gone quiet. Three key takeaways: 1. Summer is not the off-season for marketing. Going dark now builds a revenue cliff you'll hit in September and October. 2. Companies that market year-round spend less per lead than companies that stop and restart. Every pause means paying to rebuild momentum. 3. Seasonal content, pre-selling fall services, and staying active on Google Business Profile keep your pipeline full without requiring much time. Download the free Summer Marketing Planner at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai [http://marketingthatactuallyworks.ai]. It's a month-by-month checklist covering June through September with content ideas, email campaign timing, and the fall pre-sell strategy from this episode. Next week: The Truth About Facebook and Instagram Ads with Hannah Kilpatrick.

2 de jun de 202614 min
episode Marketing Your Specialty Services: Termites, Bed Bugs, Wildlife artwork

Marketing Your Specialty Services: Termites, Bed Bugs, Wildlife

Most pest control companies treat termites, bed bugs, and wildlife like afterthoughts on their website. One paragraph each, buried under a generic services page. Then they wonder why the calls don't come in. In Episode 21, Adam Bennett, Elisabeth Pallante, and CMO Chad Treadway break down why specialty services need their own marketing playbook. These services often pay far more per job than recurring pest control, but most operators spend almost nothing marketing them on purpose. What you'll learn: * Why termite, bed bug, and wildlife customers search differently and need different content * The 8 to 10 termite pages every pest control site should have * Why the WDIR (wood-destroying insect report) market needs its own approach for real estate agents * How emotional copy and phone-first design win more bed bug jobs * Why speed to lead matters more for bed bugs than almost any other service * How state licensing shapes what you can and can't market in wildlife services * Seasonal timing for squirrel, bat, and rodent campaigns * Why putting price ranges on wildlife pages saves your phone team hours of dead-end calls * How to track each specialty as its own profit center Three key takeaways: 1. Specialty services need their own dedicated marketing. A buried subpage won't cut it. 2. Match your marketing to each service's customer mindset. Termites need education, bed bugs need reassurance, wildlife needs speed. 3. Track each specialty as its own profit center. The economics are different from your recurring pest control work. This episode is for pest control owners and marketing managers who do termite, bed bug, or wildlife work and want those services to pull their weight in the revenue mix. Get your free pest control marketing audit at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai [http://marketingthatactuallyworks.ai]. While you're there, download the 20-point Pest Control Marketing Checklist we use with every client. About the show: Marketing That Actually Works is a 15-minute weekly podcast for pest control operators who want real growth, not empty promises. Adam Bennett and Elisabeth Pallante from Cube Creative Design share practical, tactical marketing strategies you can use between service calls. New episodes drop every Tuesday. Hosts: Adam Bennett, CEO, and Elisabeth Pallante, Content Operations Manager, Cube Creative Design Guest: Chad Treadway, CMO, Cube Creative Design Coming next Tuesday: Episode 22 with Emily Porter on website speed and performance.

26 de may de 202614 min
episode Website Speed and Performance — Why It Matters for Leads artwork

Website Speed and Performance — Why It Matters for Leads

Is your website fast enough to keep the leads you're paying for? If your site takes more than three seconds to load, nearly half your visitors are leaving before they see your phone number. That's not a tech problem. That's a lead problem. In this episode, Adam Bennett and Elisabeth Pallante sit down with Cube Creative web project specialist Emily Porter to break down website speed and performance for pest control companies. Emily walks through exactly how to test your site speed using free tools, what the scores mean, and which fixes make the biggest difference. The conversation covers the three biggest speed killers Emily sees on nearly every pest control site audit: oversized images that balloon page weight to 15 times what it should be, plugin bloat from 30 or 40 plugins when most sites only need 10 to 15, and cheap shared hosting that puts a hard ceiling on how fast your site can load no matter what else you optimize. Adam and Elisabeth connect the technical side to real business impact. Companies spending thousands per month on Google Ads are losing a huge percentage of that traffic to slow load times, and operators never see the loss because there's no missed call for a visitor who bounced in two seconds. Elisabeth breaks down the revenue math: 1,000 monthly visitors, 40 percent bouncing from speed, and $4,000 in potential revenue walking out the door. Emily gives operators a clear action plan: test your site at pagespeed.web.dev [http://pagespeed.web.dev], check your mobile score, and hand the report to your developer. She provides four specific questions to ask your web developer this week and explains when optimization isn't enough and a rebuild makes more financial sense. Three key takeaways: 1. A slow website is costing you leads right now. More than three seconds to load and nearly half your visitors are gone before they see anything. 2. You can test your own site speed in under 60 seconds with free tools, and the fixes are usually straightforward. 3. The three biggest speed killers are oversized images, too many plugins, and cheap hosting. Fixing even one can cut your load time in half. Download the free Website Speed Checklist at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai [http://marketingthatactuallyworks.ai]. It walks you through everything covered in this episode, step by step. Next week: Marketing Your Specialty Services, Termites, Bed Bugs, and Wildlife, with Chad Treadway.

19 de may de 202614 min
episode Video Marketing for Pest Control Companies artwork

Video Marketing for Pest Control Companies

Video converts better than any other content type across every platform pest control companies use. And right now, most of your local competitors have no video presence at all. That's a first-mover advantage—but it won't last forever. In this episode, social media manager Hannah Kilpatrick breaks down the four video types every pest control company needs and how to film them without a production budget. The four types and what each one does: Company Overview Video. This is your homepage video—60 to 90 seconds. The owner or a key team member on camera answering the question every new visitor is asking: who are you and why should I call you? This is the highest-leverage single video you can have. Build it first. Service Explainer Videos. One per major service: termite treatment, bed bug heat treatment, rodent exclusion. Two minutes max. Show the process, explain what's happening, and tell the customer what to expect. These reduce pre-call anxiety and post-service complaints. Customer Testimonial Videos. Real customers on camera—30 to 60 seconds. Just ask two questions: What was the problem before you called us? What was your experience like? Video testimonials are harder to dismiss than written reviews. Short-Form Field Content. Before-and-afters, educational tips, behind-the-scenes moments. Your ongoing weekly presence on Instagram and Facebook. We also cover the practical stuff—how to film without looking terrible: Your phone is the camera. An iPhone or recent Android shoots 4K video. The one upgrade worth making: a $20 tripod. Shaky footage is the most common reason DIY video looks bad. Lighting: Face a window. Light on your face, not behind you. Filming with a window at your back creates a silhouette effect. Sound: People tolerate average video quality but won't tolerate bad audio. For longer videos, a $25 lapel mic is worth it. What to say: Write three bullet points on a sticky note and tape it above the camera. Talk through them naturally. Film 4-5 takes, keep the best one. Then we cover repurposing—how to get maximum mileage from one video: Host on YouTube, embed on your website. Pull 30-60 second clips for Instagram and Facebook. Use thumbnails with play buttons in email. One video shoot can produce 4-6 pieces of content if you're intentional about it. Realistic cadence: Film one batch per month. Two to three videos in a single afternoon gives you 24-36 videos per year—more than enough to build a strong library. Download our free Video Script Template Pack at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai [http://marketingthatactuallyworks.ai]—pre-written outlines for all four video types so you're not staring at a blank page.

12 de may de 202615 min