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    Social Media vs a Website: What Bristol Tradesmen Actually Need in 2026

    AWResults
    8 min read

    If you ask a room full of Bristol tradesmen where they get their work from, most will say word-of-mouth and Facebook. Social media feels productive — you post a photo of your latest job, get some likes, maybe a comment or two. But are those likes actually turning into paying jobs?

    We've worked with dozens of tradesmen across Bristol, and the data tells a very clear story: a professional website consistently outperforms social media for generating genuine, high-value leads. That doesn't mean social media is useless — but if you had to choose one, the answer is clear.

    1

    The Problem with Relying on Social Media for Leads

    Social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram are designed to keep people scrolling, not to connect them with local tradesmen. When someone needs a plumber in Redland or an electrician in Bedminster, they don't open Instagram — they open Google. And if you don't have a website, you're invisible to those high-intent searchers.

    There's also the platform risk. You don't own your Facebook page — Meta does. They can change the algorithm, reduce your reach, or even suspend your account at any time. We've seen Bristol tradesmen lose thousands of followers overnight due to algorithm changes they had no control over.

    Consider the maths: a typical Facebook post from a local tradesman reaches 5-10% of their followers organically. So if you have 500 followers, 25-50 people see your post. Of those, maybe 1-2 are actually looking for your service right now. Compare that to appearing on page one of Google where every single person searching is actively looking for what you offer.

    2

    Why Google Search Beats Social Media for Tradesmen

    The fundamental difference between Google and social media is intent. Someone searching 'roofer Bristol' on Google needs a roofer right now. That's why getting found on Google is the most effective strategy for Bristol tradesmen. Someone scrolling Facebook at 10pm doesn't. This intent gap is why Google leads convert at 5-15%, while social media leads typically convert at under 1%.

    Google also has far greater reach than any social media platform for local services. 'Plumber Bristol' gets 1,300+ searches per month. 'Electrician Bristol' gets 1,100+. 'Builder Bristol' gets 900+. These are people in your area, searching for your exact service, ready to hire someone today.

    A website that ranks well on Google is like having a shop on the busiest high street in Bristol — except the rent is zero once you've set it up. Social media is more like handing out flyers in a park — some people might be interested, but most are just there to walk the dog.

    3

    What a Tradesman's Website Actually Needs

    Your website doesn't need to be complex. The most effective tradesman websites are simple, fast, and laser-focused on converting visitors into enquiries. You need: a clear homepage explaining what you do and where, individual service pages, a gallery of your work, testimonials, and an easy way to get in touch.

    The phone number should be clickable and visible on every page — remember, most visitors are on their phones. Include a simple contact form as an alternative for people who prefer not to call. Add your Google review rating prominently to build instant trust.

    Speed matters enormously. If your website takes more than 3 seconds to load on mobile, over half your visitors will leave before seeing anything. A well-built website loads in under 2 seconds and works perfectly on every device. This isn't optional — it's the difference between getting leads and losing them.

    4

    Where Social Media Does Add Value

    Social media isn't worthless — it just shouldn't be your primary marketing channel. It works brilliantly for showcasing your work, building personal brand, and staying top-of-mind with past customers who might refer you.

    The best use of social media for Bristol tradesmen is sharing before-and-after photos of your work, linking back to your website. This creates a virtuous cycle: social media drives initial awareness, your website provides credibility and captures the enquiry, and your Google reviews close the deal.

    Facebook groups like 'Bristol Recommendations' can also be valuable — but only if you're being genuinely helpful rather than constantly self-promoting. Answer people's questions, share expertise freely, and let your knowledge demonstrate your capability. When someone asks for a tradesman recommendation, your helpfulness will be remembered.

    5

    The Winning Strategy: Website First, Social Media Second

    The tradesmen in Bristol who generate the most consistent work follow a clear priority order: first, a professional website optimised for local search; second, a fully optimised Google Business Profile with strong reviews; third, social media as a supporting channel.

    Think of it like building a house. Your website is the foundation — without it, everything else is unstable. Your Google Business Profile is the structure. Social media is the decoration — nice to have, but meaningless without the foundations in place.

    The investment required reflects this priority too. A professional website is a one-time cost of £500-1500 that generates leads for years. Google Business Profile optimisation is free or low-cost. Social media takes time but no money. Put your budget where the returns are highest — your website and Google presence.

    6

    Real Results: Bristol Tradesmen Who Made the Switch

    We consistently see the same pattern with Bristol tradesmen who invest in a proper website after relying solely on social media. Within 4-8 weeks, they start appearing in Google search results. Within 8-12 weeks, they're receiving 5-15 enquiries per week through their website — enquiries from people who are ready to hire, not just browsing.

    The quality of leads changes dramatically too. Social media leads often involve lengthy back-and-forth messaging, price shopping, and tyre-kickers. Website leads tend to be higher intent — the person has read your service page, seen your reviews, looked at your work, and decided to contact you. They're further along the decision-making process.

    One Bristol electrician we worked with went from relying entirely on Facebook groups to generating 90% of his work through Google within three months. His average job value increased by 40% because website leads were looking for quality, not the cheapest quote.

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