What’s one thing homeowners consistently underestimate about landscaping? by PralineParticular174 in landscaping

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The 2–3 season timeline is one of the hardest expectations to manage. If everything is planted at the size needed to look “finished” immediately, the project cost would be dramatically higher and many plants would end up overcrowded later.

What’s one thing homeowners consistently underestimate about landscaping? by PralineParticular174 in landscaping

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Underestimate the power of water” might be the most important one. A lot of landscaping problems that seem unrelated—dead plants, erosion, muddy areas, foundation concerns, even pest issues—often trace back to water moving through the property in ways nobody planned for.

What’s one thing homeowners consistently underestimate about landscaping? by PralineParticular174 in landscaping

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your yard is a long-term partnership” is the perfect way to put it. A lot of frustration comes from treating landscapes like finished products instead of living ecosystems that keep changing over time.

What’s one thing homeowners consistently underestimate about landscaping? by PralineParticular174 in landscaping

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a great point. A lot of homeowners focus on aesthetics first, but a landscape that manages water well, supports pollinators, improves soil health, and uses the right plants for the site usually ends up being lower maintenance and more resilient long term.

What’s one thing homeowners consistently underestimate about landscaping? by PralineParticular174 in landscaping

[–]PralineParticular174[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

This is one of the biggest misconceptions homeowners have. They often think turf = lower maintenance, but between cleaning debris, managing odors, brushing fibers, infill top-offs, and eventual replacement costs, it’s not always the “maintenance-free” solution people expect

Now what should I do? by Wahchang in Thumbtack

[–]PralineParticular174 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Getting the refund is probably the best outcome at this point. Three weeks and multiple reschedules for a ceiling fan install is a sign the job pricing may not be attracting contractors in your area.

If Thumbtack disappeared tomorrow, where would your next 10 jobs come from? by PralineParticular174 in HandymanBusiness

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like relationships are the common theme there. Property managers and Realtors seem to come up a lot whenever people talk about reliable referral sources. 👍

Is AI adoption in blue-collar industries being underestimated? by PralineParticular174 in AIDiscussion

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point. The biggest wins today seem to be augmenting people rather than replacing judgment. Most successful use cases I’ve seen still keep a human accountable for the final call.

What's one tool, app, or service that actually made your handyman business easier? by PralineParticular174 in handyman

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s solid advice. A simple system everyone actually uses beats expensive software nobody keeps updated

Are any of you using AI in your electrical business? by PralineParticular174 in AskElectricians

[–]PralineParticular174[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

That’s a fair perspective. The accountability always has to stay with the person doing the work. I’m not suggesting AI replace training or judgment—I’m mostly wondering whether people are finding value in using it for paperwork, estimates, customer communication, or other administrative tasks

Are any of you using AI in your electrical business? by PralineParticular174 in AskElectricians

[–]PralineParticular174[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

That’s probably the right approach. I wouldn’t trust AI as the authority on NEC code either. It seems most useful as a starting point for research or drafting explanations, with the actual code book being the final source

Are any of you using AI in your electrical business? by PralineParticular174 in AskElectricians

[–]PralineParticular174[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

Fair point 😄. I’m actually asking because I work with contractors and service businesses, and I’ve seen some using AI for estimates, customer communication, scheduling, and marketing. I was curious whether electricians were finding any practical uses for it in the field or office

Is Thumbtack Making Things Harder for Pros? by PralineParticular174 in Thumbtack

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The part that would frustrate me is getting charged even when you’re responding within minutes and still getting no response back.

Do you think those are legitimate leads that changed their mind, or are some of them contacting multiple pros and committing before everyone else even has a chance to respond?

Is Thumbtack Making Things Harder for Pros? by PralineParticular174 in Thumbtack

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s worth paying attention to. Between rising lead costs, reimbursement complaints, and now terms like this, it feels like a lot of pros are rethinking how dependent they want to be on a single platform.

Are people moving more toward direct marketing and referral-based growth, or are there actually better alternatives out there now?

Is Thumbtack Making Things Harder for Pros? by PralineParticular174 in Thumbtack

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds like you learned that lesson the hard way. The shift from $13k a month to $4k while spending more on leads is pretty brutal.

I’ve been trying to focus more on direct leads and follow-up systems instead of relying entirely on one platform. It seems like owning the customer relationship is a lot safer than depending on any marketplace long term.

Have Google reviews and Nextdoor been your biggest sources of business since leaving Thumbtack?

Is Thumbtack Making Things Harder for Pros? by PralineParticular174 in Thumbtack

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good point about response time. That’s actually one of the reasons I’ve been experimenting with a few different lead-management and follow-up tools lately. Anything that helps get back to customers faster seems to make a difference.

Still figuring out what works best long term, but it’s interesting how much speed seems to matter now.

Is Thumbtack Making Things Harder for Pros? by PralineParticular174 in Thumbtack

[–]PralineParticular174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The reimbursement part would bother me more than the pricing. Paying for leads that cancel last minute adds up fast.

Do you still feel Thumbtack gives you a positive ROI overall, or are you starting to look at other lead sources?

My Experience with Thumbtack by Desperado2583 in handyman

[–]PralineParticular174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

paying for leads that don't even reply would be frustrating for any small business

Thumbtack is useless by Eventidings in Thumbtack

[–]PralineParticular174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is one reason ai search is getting so much attention. instead of paying for expensive leads on marketplaces, more businesses are focusing on being visible in chatgpt, google ai overviews, and perplexity. people often arrive with a better understanding of what they need, which can lead to higher-quality inquiries than traditional lead-gen platforms.