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Pest Control Marketing That Actually Works

Pest Control Marketing That Actually Works

By: Cube Creative Design
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Pest Control Marketing That Actually Works: The Growth Podcast

Stop wasting money on marketing that doesn't deliver. Pest Control Marketing That Actually Works is the weekly podcast for pest control business owners who want real results, not empty promises.

Hosted by Adam Bennett and Elisabeth Pallante from Cube Creative Design, each 20-minute episode delivers practical strategies you can implement right away. No fluff. No theory. Just proven tactics from a team that's spent 20 years helping pest control companies grow.

What You'll Learn:

Every episode tackles a specific marketing challenge pest control operators face. From building a website that converts visitors into customers, to running Google Ads that actually pay off, to creating content that ranks on page one. You'll hear what works, what doesn't, and exactly how to tell the difference.

We cover topics like:

  • Getting more leads from your website without spending more on ads
  • Building a review strategy that brings in new customers on autopilot
  • Creating content that ranks for searches in your service area
  • Running paid ads that generate profit, not just clicks
  • Using email and automation to turn one-time customers into recurring revenue
  • Hiring marketing help without getting burned

Who This Podcast Is For:

If you run a pest control company with 2-15 trucks and revenue between $250K and $5M, this show was built for you. Whether you handle your own marketing or manage a small team, you'll get strategies sized right for your business.

Episodes are designed for busy operators. Listen on a drive between service calls and walk away with three clear takeaways you can use that week.

About Your Hosts:

Adam Bennett is CEO of Cube Creative Design, a digital marketing agency founded in 2005. He's helped dozens of pest control companies build marketing systems that deliver consistent growth.

Elisabeth Pallante is Content Operations Manager at Cube Creative. She leads the content and SEO strategy that has helped clients increase web traffic by 154% year-over-year.

They're joined regularly by Chad Treadway, Chief Marketing Officer, along with social media specialist Hannah Kilpatrick and web project specialist Emily Porter.

What Makes This Show Different:

We don't sell ads or sponsorships on this podcast. Every minute is focused on giving you value. We share the same strategies we use with paying clients because we believe in leading with generosity.

At the end of each episode, we offer a free marketing audit at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai. No obligation, no pressure. Just a clear look at what's working in your current marketing and what's costing you money.

New Episodes Every Tuesday

Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen. Leave a review if the show helps you. It's the best way to help other pest control operators find us.

Ready to stop guessing and start growing? Hit subscribe and join us next Tuesday.

Pest Control Marketing That Actually Works is produced by Cube Creative Design, a HubSpot Gold Partner agency based in Western North Carolina. Learn more at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai

2025 Cube Creative Design
Episodes
  • Service Area Expansion: Marketing in New Cities
    Jul 7 2026

    Your home market is humming. You're at six or eight trucks. The next city over looks like the obvious move. So why do most pest control companies lose money for six months when they expand?

    In this episode, Adam Bennett and Elisabeth Pallante break down why service area expansion is a brand-new business problem rather than a marketing problem, how to pick the right expansion market using density and drive time instead of raw population, and what a real city page looks like compared to the thin service-area pages that hurt more than they help.

    You'll learn why the cost per acquired customer in a new market is typically 2 to 3 times what it costs at home for the first six months, why review velocity is the leading indicator of whether you're going to win, and the 90-day launch playbook that gets you from zero presence to a credible local foothold. Plus the one filter that talks most owners out of the wrong expansion before they spend a dollar.

    Get your free pest control marketing audit at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai. Score your website's AI search trust signals free at thecubescore.com.

    Show More Show Less
    16 mins
  • Email Automation: Set It and Forget It Lead Nurturing
    Jun 23 2026

    70 to 80 percent of pest control leads don't book on the first contact. They fill out a form, get a quote, then go quiet. Most pest control companies have no system for recovering those leads. They sit in a spreadsheet until someone gives up on them.

    In Episode 25, Adam Bennett, Elisabeth Pallante, and Chad Treadway walk through the three email automation sequences every pest control company should have running.

    Sequence one: the new-lead nurture. Four to five emails over two weeks for leads who filled out a form but didn't book within 24 hours. Open rates typically run 35 to 50 percent on the first email and settle around 20 to 25 percent by email four.

    Sequence two: the quote follow-up. Four emails over two weeks for leads who got a quote but didn't sign. Cube Creative clients pull an additional 18 to 25 percent close rate on quotes they would have lost.

    Sequence three: customer reactivation. Three emails over three weeks for past customers who haven't booked a service in 12 months or more. Response rates run 12 to 18 percent, which is wildly higher than acquisition because the relationship already exists. The math is brutal in the best way: 800 past customers, 15 percent reactivation, $400 ticket equals $48,000 from a sequence you set up in a weekend.

    You'll also learn what actually goes in the emails. The subject line patterns that work for pest control. Why 80 to 150 words beats a 600-word narrative every time. Why personalization beyond the first name matters. And the clear-next-step rule that turns reads into replies.

    Then Chad pushes back on the episode title. The "forget it" part is where most pest control companies lose ground. Automations set up two years ago reference last year's pricing, link to deleted pages, and were written by a marketing intern who's been gone for 18 months. You'll get the monthly and quarterly check-ins that keep your sequences working.

    If you only have time for one, Chad recommends starting with the quote follow-up. Highest leverage, easiest to justify, one afternoon to build in HubSpot, ActiveCampaign, or any modern email platform.

    Get your free pest control marketing audit at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai

    Score your website's AI search trust signals free at thecubescore.com

    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
  • The Transparency Problem: Why 93% of Pest Control Sites Are Hiding the One Thing Buyers Want
    Jun 30 2026

    92 to 93 percent of pest control websites don't show pricing anywhere on the site. Not a starting range. Not a service-by-service breakdown. Not even a "most customers pay between this and this." Just nothing.

    Meanwhile, the number one question pest control buyers have when they hit your site is "what is this going to cost me." The gap costs you leads you never even knew were looking.

    In Episode 26, Adam Bennett, Elisabeth Pallante, and Chad Treadway break down why hiding pricing actually protects your competition rather than your margin. You'll hear the three objections pest control owners raise about transparent pricing and why each one is wrong:

    • "My competitors will see my prices and undercut me." (They already know what you charge.)
    • "My pricing is too variable." (80 percent of your residential jobs fall within a tight band.)
    • "I want them to call me so I can sell them." (The sale happens before the phone call.)

    Then they walk through the four formats pest control companies can use to show pricing without committing to a rigid price list: the starting range, the most-customers-pay range, the treatment-by-treatment breakdown, and the estimator. You'll get the exact language that works and the language that doesn't.

    You'll also hear about a Southeast pest control company that added starting pricing to its service pages last fall. No other changes. Their form conversion rate went from 3.1 percent to 7.4 percent over four months, and their cost per lead from Google Ads dropped 41 percent. Same traffic, same ad spend, completely different outcomes.

    The episode closes with transparency beyond pricing. Policies, the humans behind the company, and your point of view. Plus Chad's one-sentence change you can make on your highest-traffic page this week that will measurably move your form fill rate within 30 days.

    Get your free pest control marketing audit at marketingthatactuallyworks.ai

    Score your website's AI search trust signals free at thecubescore.com

    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
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