Surprisingly low business reputation and trustworthiness ratings lately
#1
I followed the most upvoted advice on here for building customer trust in my small home repair business. Got the professional website through Squarespace, paid for the nice logo, set up a Google Business profile with all the photos. Made sure to collect reviews from every job and respond to them. Cost me about $800 and three months of evenings. And it didn't move the needle at all. People still hesitate to book, still ask if I'm insured three times, still go with the bigger company down the road even though I charge less.

I even joined the local chamber of commerce like someone suggested. $350 a year. Went to three networking events. Got one lead who never called back. The trust signals that are supposed to work just don't seem to translate to actual bookings. I'm starting to think the whole "small business = authentic = trustworthy" thing is a myth when you're competing against companies with fifteen vans and branded uniforms.

Has anyone else hit this wall where you did all the textbook trust-building stuff and it just didn't convert? What actually made people pick you over the bigger guys? I need something that works for a solo operator running jobs out of a 2012 Ford Transit, not the kind of advice that assumes you have a team.
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#2
I'm sorry to hear it hasn't worked out. It's tough competing against big brands when you're solo. Sometimes trying direct outreach to past clients can yield better results than ads and profiles.
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#3
Have you thought about leveraging social media? Even just a few local posts or joining neighborhood Facebook groups can help you connect with more homeowners.
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#4
Yikes, sounds frustrating. I used to be in a similar spot with my cleaning business. Word of mouth really turned things around for me, but it took time.
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#5
This is common. Customers often equate size with reliability. Try offering guarantees or unique services that the big companies can't easily replicate.
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#6
I went through something like this too. Focusing on personal touches in your service can really help break through the noise of larger competitors.
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