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How To

How to write service-page content that gets calls

8 min read Most useful for: service businesses that want more calls, quote requests, or bookings from website traffic Free to read — no signup required
Summary

The best service pages do not sound clever. They sound clear. A strong page tells the reader what you do, where you do it, why they should trust you, and what to do next in under a minute.

Who this is for

This guide is for service businesses that want more calls, quote requests, or bookings from website traffic. If you are tired of guessing, overpaying, or putting this task off because it feels too technical, this walkthrough gives you a simpler starting point.

What you'll need

You do not need a marketing team or a big budget. You just need a calm hour, your business basics, and a willingness to keep things simple.

  • Your business name, phone number, hours, and service area
  • A few real photos from your business
  • A list of your main services or offers
  • One notebook or doc to capture what works

Step-by-step playbook

Work through these in order. They are written for owners, not marketers.

  • Start with a headline that says the service and the location clearly.
  • Describe the main problem the customer is trying to solve in everyday language.
  • List what is included, what makes your process easier, and what happens next.
  • Add proof: reviews, photos, guarantees, years in business, or fast response times.
  • Answer two or three common objections before the reader has to ask them.
  • Repeat one strong CTA near the top, middle, and bottom of the page.

Common mistakes to avoid

These are the traps we see most often. Skip them and you are already ahead.

  • Writing paragraphs that talk about your company more than the customer's problem.
  • Using jargon or broad promises with no proof behind them.
  • Forgetting to mention the areas you actually serve.
  • Ending the page without a simple next step.

Quick checklist

Use this as your before-you-publish or before-you-move-on check.

  • Headline includes service + location
  • One customer problem is named clearly
  • Proof section is visible without digging
  • CTA appears more than once

Need a second set of eyes?

If you want help turning this into a clean setup for your actual business, book a free strategy call with AES. We can tell you what to keep, what to simplify, and what to fix first.

Want help applying this to your real business?

The free guides help you do a lot on your own. If you want a faster path, AES can help you clean up the setup, remove the guesswork, and build the version that actually fits your business.

Book a free setup call