wiki/knowledge/brand-strategy/avant-gardening-positioning.md · 657 words · 2025-12-12

Avant Gardening — Premium Positioning Strategy

Overview

Avant is a residential landscaping and gardening client currently on a one-time flat-fee contract. The strategic opportunity is to convert this into a recurring retainer (~$2,500–$3,000/mo) by repositioning Avant as a premium service provider and expanding their visible service offerings. This approach applies broadly to any trade or service business competing against low-cost, informal operators.

Client context: Avant's contract runs through end of January. They are happy with work delivered so far. A retainer proposal is being prepared for the next call.

See also: [1]


The Core Positioning Problem

Avant competes in a market crowded with informal, low-overhead operators — small crews running on word-of-mouth and low prices. Without a deliberate positioning strategy, Avant defaults to competing on price, which erodes margins and attracts low-value jobs.

The opportunity is to differentiate on professionalism, expertise, and project scale rather than cost.


Strategic Pillars

1. Premium Professionalism

Position Avant as the legitimate, credentialed alternative to informal competitors. Signals of professionalism that can be communicated through the website and marketing:

"He can come across as more professional, better trained, maybe has some education in plant species."
— Mark Hope, 2025-12-12 call

2. Target High-Value Hardscaping Projects

Hardscaping (patios, retaining walls, decks, pavers) represents the highest-margin work in the landscaping category. Minimum project values are typically $5,000–$6,000+, making a single closed job worth more than two months of a basic retainer.

Marketing implications:
- Dedicated hardscaping landing page with project gallery
- SEO and Google Ads targeting hardscaping-specific keywords
- Lead forms that qualify for project type and budget

3. Seasonal Diversification — Snow Plowing

Avant already offers snow plowing services but this is not reflected anywhere on their website, leaving winter revenue on the table and creating a seasonal revenue gap.

Adding snow plowing to the site accomplishes two things:
1. Generates inbound leads during months when landscaping demand drops
2. Demonstrates to retainer clients that Avant is a year-round partner, not a seasonal vendor

Recommended action: Add a snow plowing service page before the next winter season; include it in any Google Ads campaigns running in fall/winter.

"That would be part of the strategy — de-seasonalize the business."
— Mark Hope, 2025-12-12 call


Retainer Proposal Framework

When pitching the retainer, the proposal should be concrete and ROI-anchored:

Element Detail
Monthly fee ~$2,500–$3,000/mo
Deliverables SEO, Google Ads management, website updates, content
ROI anchor One hardscaping job ($5k+) covers two months of retainer
Hosting Migrate hosting to Asymmetric for additional MRR

Key framing: The client needs to see that marketing spend pays for itself. A single high-value hardscaping lead that converts covers the retainer cost. Frame the service as a lead generation engine, not a marketing expense.


Generalizable Principle

This positioning strategy applies to any trade or home services client (landscaping, plumbing, HVAC, electrical) competing against informal operators:

  1. Professionalism as differentiation — when you can't win on price, win on trust and credentials
  2. Target high-ticket jobs — identify the highest-margin service line and build marketing around it
  3. De-seasonalize — surface complementary services that generate revenue in off-peak months
  4. Anchor ROI to a single job — makes the retainer feel low-risk relative to upside

Action Items (as of 2025-12-12)


Sources

  1. Index
  2. Retainer Conversion Playbook
  3. De Seasonalization Strategy
  4. 2025 12 12 Weekly Call Mark Karly