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StevesTidyTurf's avatar
StevesTidyTurf
Contributor 3
20 days ago

Angi

Hi there! I know some folks have seen me here, so I pose a question. Does anyone utilize Angi for leads? Is it worth it? Or is the percentage they ask for to much? I have heard a lot of good about the service, but also, I've heard a lot of bad as well. Truth be told, I cant help but turn it down because I want my clients to pay me. Not be looped in to a service that charges me, after charging the client to find my services. It makes no sense to me.. anyone else feel the same? 

2 Replies

  • My husband has a pest control business.  He used Angi (Angie's List) some time back.  It was difficult for him to convert the leads into $$$.  There appeared to be a lot of lookie-loos but he had to pay anyway.  He was not a fan.

  • You are 100% spot on, and your gut instinct is completely correct. The math and the business model behind platforms like Angi just don't add up for a serious service business, and you share that exact frustration with thousands of contractors.

    ​Here is the honest breakdown of why so many folks get burned:

    ​The Real Risks

    • The "Shared Lead" Money Pit: When they charge you for a lead, they usually sell that exact same phone number to 3 to 5 of your local competitors at the same time. You end up in a mad dash to call within 60 seconds, which forces a race to the bottom on price.
    • Locked-In Contracts: They are notorious for annual contracts. If you realize after two months that the leads are dead ends or fake numbers, trying to cancel can slap you with early termination fees around 35% of the remaining contract value.
    • Renting Your Clients: You nailed it—it makes no sense to pay a massive middleman tax to find people in your own backyard. You're paying them for a client you still have to bust your hump to win.

    ​What to Do Instead

    ​Instead of throwing money at a middleman, put that energy into assets you actually own:

    • Google Business Profile (Free): Optimize your local map listing. Load it with great photos and text a direct review link to every happy customer the second the job is done.
    • Google Local Services Ads (LSA): If you are going to pay for leads, use LSA. You only pay when a customer explicitly calls or messages you directly from Google search—not for a shared email list.
    • Yard Signs & Flyers: Put up signs on every project you finish (with permission) and drop flyers to the closest neighbors. Neighbors hire who they see working next door.

    ​Trust your gut on this one. Keep your money, own your client relationships, and let the corporate lead-brokers play their games with someone else.