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The Perfect Roofing Marketing Budget for 2026
Episode 394

The Perfect Roofing Marketing Budget for 2026

Roofing Podcast: Hook Better Leads

January 20, 202632m 4s

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Show Notes

Guest:
Brynn Wilson – Sales Consultant, Hook Agency

This episode breaks down what a realistic and effective roofing marketing budget looks like heading into 2026, and why many roofing companies either overspend emotionally or underspend out of fear—both of which stall growth. The episode explains why most roofing companies should expect to invest roughly 5–10% of revenue into marketing depending on market size, competition, and growth goals, and why that range feels uncomfortable in today’s increasingly aggressive landscape. It explores how private equity, higher competition, AI-driven tools, and expanded channel options have permanently raised the cost of visibility, while also clarifying when it actually makes sense to not be in growth mode. The discussion walks through when traditional channels like TV, radio, and billboards begin to make sense—typically in the $5–10M range—and why those channels only work when branding is strong, memorable, and differentiated. It dives into the importance of sticky brand names, visual identity, and cutting through noise before spending on awareness channels. The episode then outlines where most roofing companies should prioritize budget first: high-intent search channels like Google Ads and Local Service Ads, local brand visibility through trucks, yard signs, jobsite branding, and community presence, and social media that features real people on camera rather than generic posts. It also explores low-cost, high-effort strategies such as Facebook group engagement, referral ecosystems, networking groups, geographic dominance (“five-mile fame”), sales enablement materials, and compounding word-of-mouth. Finally, the episode emphasizes the principle of layering instead of chopping, explaining why sustainable growth comes from stacking channels over time rather than constantly restarting marketing efforts, and why focusing on being referable, visible, and trusted in a tight local market outperforms spreading efforts thin. 

Topics

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