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How to get more plumbing jobs: a practical marketing playbook

A no-nonsense playbook for winning more plumbing work in Ireland: get found on Google, build reviews, earn referrals, use lead sites wisely, mine repeat customers, and answer fast.

Matt Horner Matt Horner Co-Founder 7 min read
A plumber greeting a friendly homeowner at their front door, toolbag in hand

Most plumbers in Ireland are not short of demand. The work is out there. What they have is a leaky bucket: enquiries that come in and quietly drain away before they ever turn into a booked job.

You do not need a marketing agency or a clever funnel to fix that. You need to do a handful of plain things well, and in the right order. This is the order I would work through if I were trying to fill a one-van diary from a standing start.

Where plumbing jobs actually come from

Before you chase tactics, it helps to know the three buckets your work comes from:

  • Owned channels you control and do not pay per job for: your Google listing, your reviews, your past customers, referrals.
  • Paid channels where you buy attention: Google Ads, Local Services Ads, social ads.
  • Rented leads where a platform sells you an enquiry: Tradesmen.ie, Bark, MyBuilder and the like.

The mistake most owners make is starting with rented leads because it feels fast, while ignoring the owned channels that cost nothing and compound over time. The playbook below works the other way around: build the free pipeline first, then top it up with paid and rented when you want more.

Claim and optimise your Google Business Profile

If you do one thing this week, do this. Your Google Business Profile is the free listing that decides whether you show up in the map pack when someone searches "plumber near me". For most local plumbers it is the single biggest source of inbound calls.

Claim it (it is free), then make it complete:

  • Correct business name, phone number and service area.
  • The right primary category (Plumber) plus relevant secondary ones.
  • Real photos of you, your van and finished jobs. Listings with photos get more clicks than bare ones.
  • A short, honest description and your actual hours.
  • A few posts now and then so it does not look dormant.

A complete, active profile with recent reviews routinely outranks a half-filled one, even from a bigger firm. This is the highest return on your time of anything in this guide.

Beyond the map pack, you want to turn up when people search around your towns. You do not need a fancy website, but you do need a tidy, fast one that says who you are, where you work and how to reach you.

A few basics carry most of the weight:

  • Keep your name, address and phone number identical everywhere they appear, so Google trusts the listing.
  • Have a simple service-area site, with a page for each main service (boiler repairs, bathroom installs, leaks) and your main towns.
  • Get listed in the directories that matter in your area so your details are consistent across the web.

This is slow-burn work, but it stacks under your Google profile and keeps paying off long after you have done it.

Win on reviews and reputation

Reviews do double duty: they help you rank higher in local search, and they are the thing a customer actually reads before they ring you. A plumber with thirty recent five-star reviews wins the call over one with three from two years ago, almost every time.

The short version is to ask every happy customer the moment the job is done, and make it one tap for them. There is more to it than that, and getting the timing and the script right is worth doing properly, so I have written the full method in a dedicated guide on getting more Google reviews as a plumber.

Lead sites and directories

Tradesmen.ie, Bark, MyBuilder and similar platforms are the rented-leads bucket. They can genuinely help when you are quiet or just starting out, but go in with your eyes open: you are paying for access, often competing against several other plumbers for the same enquiry, and the moment you stop paying, the work stops too. "Free" leads usually mean you pay in time, in your data, or in a race to the bottom on price.

Here is how the three buckets compare in practice:

Channel What it costs Who owns the customer
Owned (Google listing, reviews, referrals) Mostly your time You do, for life
Paid (Google Ads, Local Services Ads) Per click or per lead You, while you keep paying
Rented (Tradesmen.ie, Bark, MyBuilder) Membership or per lead The platform

Use lead sites as a top-up, not a foundation. Every job you win through them is a chance to convert that customer into an owned one: do great work, ask for a review, and get them to call you direct next time.

The open back of a work van showing neatly organised plumbing tools and parts
Looking organised and prepared is its own marketing. Customers notice, and they tell their neighbours.

Referrals and word of mouth

Referrals are the cheapest, highest-trust jobs you will ever win, and most plumbers leave them on the table by never asking. A customer who is happy with your work is usually glad to recommend you, but only if you make it easy and remind them.

A few low-effort moves:

  • When you finish a job well, say it plainly: "If you know anyone who needs a plumber, I would really appreciate you passing my number on."
  • Leave a couple of cards or a fridge magnet behind.
  • Nudge lapsed customers you have not heard from in a year or two.
  • Build relationships with adjacent trades: electricians, builders, kitchen and bathroom fitters, and local estate agents all hit plumbing needs constantly and are glad to have a reliable name to pass on.

Repeat customers and service reminders

The work you already have is the cheapest work to win again. If you keep even a basic record of who you have worked for and what you did, you are sitting on a diary's worth of future jobs.

Annual boiler services, that radiator they meant to sort, the bathroom they mentioned wanting next year: a simple reminder at the right time turns a one-off call-out into a customer for life. Mining your own book beats chasing cold leads every single time, and it costs nothing but a few minutes of follow-up.

Answer fast - the step most plumbers skip

You can do everything above perfectly and still lose the job in the first ten seconds, because the customer rang while you were under a sink and you did not pick up. Speed wins plumbing jobs more reliably than almost anything else. Customers ring two or three plumbers and book the first one who actually answers and sounds like they can help. A missed call, or one that goes to voicemail, is usually a job handed straight to a competitor.

That is the hard part when you are working with both hands on a job. If you cannot always pick up mid-job, something needs to answer for you, capture the details and let you ring back fast. (That is exactly the gap Hey Jodie fills for plumbers, so no enquiry hits a dead end while you are working.)

Get these steps working together and the leaky bucket seals itself. You will not need to spend more to get more work; you will simply stop losing the work that was already coming your way. Start with your Google profile and answering every call, because those two pay off this week, and build the rest from there.

Part of our guides for Plumbers See how Hey Jodie helps plumbers answer every call.

Frequently asked questions

How do I get more plumbing customers without paying for leads?
Stack the free channels first. A fully optimised Google Business Profile, a steady flow of recent reviews, referrals from happy customers and other trades, and answering every call fast will fill most diaries on their own. Paid ads and rented leads are a top-up, not the foundation.
Are paid plumbing lead sites like Tradesmen.ie or Bark worth it?
They can fill gaps when you are quiet, but you are renting access and competing on speed and price every time a lead drops. Use them to top up while you build the owned channels you do not pay per lead for, such as your own reviews and referrals.
What is the fastest way to get more plumbing jobs right now?
Answer every call and reply to every enquiry faster than the next plumber. Most lost jobs are not lost on price; they go to whoever picked up first. Tighten that one thing and you will win work this week without spending a cent on marketing.

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