For most residential window & door replacement contractors, word of mouth is the marketing system that built the business. It's the highest-trust lead source available, the cheapest customer acquisition channel by a wide margin, and the closest thing to a free pipeline most operators ever see. It's also the channel that caps your growth somewhere between $1M and $3M in revenue depending on your market, and almost no contractor recognizes the cap until they've already plateaued at it.
The contractors who break through and scale to $5M+ have all built a similar set of systems, in roughly the same order. Here's what those systems are, why each one matters, and the order that almost always works.
Why word-of-mouth caps out
Word-of-mouth growth is geometric in theory and bounded in practice. Each happy customer refers some number of new customers; each new customer becomes a happy customer who refers more. That sounds like it should compound forever.
It doesn't, because of three operational realities:
- Referral velocity is slow. A homeowner who replaces their windows might recommend you to a neighbor, but only when that neighbor brings up windows in conversation. That conversation might happen once a year, or never.
- Geographic clustering is real. Word-of-mouth referrals cluster in the same 2-3 zip codes where you've already done jobs. You saturate that micro-market and growth stalls.
- You don't control the input.You can't turn up word-of-mouth volume by 30% next month if you want to grow 30%. The channel does what it does; you can't scale it on demand.
The plateau marker
System 1: Paid acquisition (Meta + Google)
The first scalable channel a contractor needs is paid acquisition. This is the channel you can dial up or down with a budget knob, and within the constraints of your ad-account history and creative quality, you can roughly control the volume month over month.
For window and door contractors, the right starting allocation is usually a 60/30/10 split, 60% Google Search and Local Service Ads (Local Service Ad), 30% Meta retargeting and lookalikes, 10% testing budget. The full channel breakdown is here.
Done well, paid acquisition delivers cost per signed job roughly equal to or somewhat above your word-of-mouth CAC (which is approximately the cost of running an excellent operation, since happy customers don't hand out retainer checks). Done badly, paid acquisition produces burned cash and bad-fit consultations. The most common ways it goes badly are here.
System 2: Lead-management infrastructure
Paid acquisition without lead-management infrastructure is a money pit. The two stages where contractors lose the most dollars in their funnel are:
Speed-to-lead
First touch in under 2 minutes via SMS, then human or AI receptionist phone qualification within 15 minutes. This single capability typically lifts contact rates from 35-40% to 70-80%, doubling every downstream conversion. See the lead-response math.
Pre-qualification before in-home
Filtering out wrong-fit leads (renters, out-of-area, project too small, no real budget, decision-maker not present) before your sales rep drives 45 minutes to sit with them. This recovers sales-rep capacity that should never have been spent in the first place. See pre-qualified vs raw.
System 3: Sales-process repeatability
Once leads are arriving as pre-qualified, pre-confirmed appointments on your calendar, the constraint moves to your sales process. Most owner-operators have a working in-home sales script in their head that they've refined over years. The question for scaling is whether that script survives outside their head, i.e., whether a sales rep you hire can execute it at 80%+ of the owner's close rate.
The systems that make sales repeatable:
- A documented, structured in-home consultation flow with checkpoints, sample-presentation order, and pricing presentation.
- A standardized written quote that the rep produces in-home (or before they leave), not a quote that's “in the office, we'll get back to you.”
- A defined follow-up cadence for quoted-but-not-yet-signed jobs. Most contractors leak 20-30% of close-able jobs because the quote ages out before a follow-up call ever happens.
- A close-rate dashboard tracked per rep, per channel, per ideal customer profile segment. Without this, you can't tell whether a slumping rep is the problem or whether the marketing channel shifted.
System 4: Compliance + data infrastructure
The least sexy and most expensive-when-missing system. Once you're running paid traffic with SMS automation, compliance posture is non-optional:
- TCPA-compliant consent capture, retained server-side with full record metadata, for at least 4 years.
- A2P 10DLC brand registration with The Campaign Registry and approved campaign use case for any SMS automation.
- STOP / HELP keyword handling, opt-out propagation across all systems, 10-business-day federal floor.
- For Canadian customers: CASL-compliant CEMs with sender identification, mailing address, and unsubscribe.
- Privacy policy + ToS that accurately describe your stack and third-party processors.
TCPA settlement exposure runs $500-$1,500 per illegally- contacted number. CASL business fines top out at CAD $10M. The cost of building this properly is dramatically lower than the cost of getting it wrong. The full compliance audit is here.
Why this becomes mandatory at scale
The order to build them in
Building all four systems at once usually overwhelms the operations of a contractor under $3M. The order that almost always works:
- System 4 (compliance baseline) before anything else. Capture consent properly on every form, register the A2P 10DLC brand, get the privacy policy current. This is foundational and cheap to do early.
- System 1 (Google + Local Service Ad first, then Meta). Highest-intent traffic with the fastest learning curve. First signed jobs from paid traffic usually within 30-45 days of launch.
- System 2 (lead management) wired up alongside System 1.Speed-to-lead and pre-qualification have to exist by the time paid traffic arrives, or you're paying full price for traffic you can't convert.
- System 3 (sales-process repeatability) once paid volume justifies a second sales rep. Documenting the sales process is meaningful work; do it once paid volume makes the document worth writing.
60-80 → 250+
Annual signed-job range a properly-built four-system stack typically supports for a residential window and door contractor moving from word-of-mouth to scaled operations.
The build vs buy decision
Each of these four systems can be built in-house. None of them should usually be built in-house in their entirety, for two reasons:
- Opportunity cost.Your operations manager spending six months building lead-management infrastructure is six months they're not running operations. The cost of pulling them off their job is almost always larger than the cost of buying it from operators who've done it before.
- Compounding-edge effects. A specialist agency running these systems across many window and door contractor accounts builds cross-client signal, creative benchmarks, audience patterns, conversion rates, that a single-shop in-house team cannot match. Each new client makes the system better at every prior client.
The contractors who scale fastest typically buy paid acquisition + lead management as a service from a niche-only specialist, build sales-process repeatability internally, and retain compliance posture as an ongoing internal priority.
Ready to talk numbers on your own pipeline?
45-minute strategy call. Live look at your ad accounts. Written diagnosis you keep, whether you sign or not.
Final thought
Word of mouth is wonderful and capped. Past the cap, scaling requires deliberate systems, paid acquisition, lead management, sales repeatability, compliance, built in the right order, with the right operational support. The contractors who get this right scale from $1M to $5M+ in 18-36 months. The ones who don't plateau, hire anticipating growth that doesn't materialize, and spend the next two years working out from underneath the wrong unit economics. Build the systems before you need them.
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