EvergreenLawn & Garden
Fresh greens built around recurring work — mowing plan cards with per-visit prices, seasonal services, and a free assessment form. Generate from this one if your business runs on routes and repeat visits.
Tell the AI what your crew does — mowing plans, cleanups, patios — and it builds the whole multi-page site with copy and photos in place. Build and preview it free, no credit card; you pay only when it goes live.
Two directions a landscaping site can take — routes and repeat visits, or design-build projects. Pick yours, hit generate, and the AI builds the real site from it.
Fresh greens built around recurring work — mowing plan cards with per-visit prices, seasonal services, and a free assessment form. Generate from this one if your business runs on routes and repeat visits.
An editorial sage-and-terracotta look where the portfolio does the talking — patios, retaining walls, and native planting, arranged for clients who browse before they call. The direction if you sell design and hardscape projects, not mowing routes.
An overgrown lot next to the same yard with fresh sod, crisp edging, and a new mulch bed sells better than anything you could write about yourself. GetSite builds a gallery page around your phone photos, and it loads fast for the neighbor scrolling on theirs.
Spell out what a weekly visit includes — mow, edge, trim, blow off the drive — and what the seasonal schedule covers, with a from-price next to each plan. Clear plans stop the "is edging extra?" calls and filter out people shopping for the cheapest cut.
You can't hear the phone over a zero-turn. An estimate form sends the address, the yard, and what they want straight to your email, so you call back at the end of the route instead of losing the job to whoever picked up.
Six things homeowners check before they hire a crew. GetSite builds all of them in.
Anyone can post a photo of a nice lawn; the before shot is what proves you did it. Pair the weed-choked beds with the finished planting, the bare dirt with the new sod, and give each project its own tile.
Recurring plans on one side — mowing, fertilizing, aeration and overseeding — and one-off projects on the other: mulch installs, drainage, hardscape. A homeowner shopping for a weekly cut and one planning a patio are different buyers, and each should find their half of the page fast.
Nobody wants to fill out a form and hear "we don't come out that far." A short list of towns and neighborhoods — or a simple map — tells people whether you'll show up before they write to you, and tells Google where you work.
You don't have to publish every number, but "mowing plans from $45 a visit" and "free assessments" do real work: they qualify the customer and make the form feel safe to send. Silence on price reads as expensive.
Letting someone work in your yard every week takes trust. Quote a few real reviews near the contact form and link your Google profile — the person about to request an assessment is exactly the person about to search your name.
Spring cleanups, summer mowing, fall leaf removal, winter prep: that's what locals actually type into Google, month by month. Re-aim the homepage each season and you're the company whose site says "leaf removal" the week the leaves come down.
A few sentences: your company name, the town, what your crews do, roughly what plans cost. That's all the AI needs to work with.
Home, services, gallery, service area, contact — separate pages with copy and images already placed. You start by editing something finished, not filling in something blank.
Say "add fall cleanups to the plans page" or "make the patio photo the hero" and the AI does it. When it looks right, put it live on your own domain — hosting and SSL come with it.
“Build a website for Maple Ridge Landscaping, a two-crew lawn and landscape company in Grand Rapids, Michigan. We do weekly mowing plans from $40 a visit, spring and fall cleanups, mulch installs, and paver patios. Earthy greens, big before-and-after photos. Pages for services, our service area, a project gallery, and a free estimate form.”
Building costs nothing. Create an account without a credit card, generate the whole site — gallery, plans, service area — and click through every page with your free credits before deciding anything.
When it's time to publish, the Maker plan at $10/month covers a landscaping company's site: your own domain, hosting and SSL, assessment request forms that land in your inbox, 100 credits a month for photo and plan updates, and SEO controls so local searches — "lawn care Charlotte," "fall cleanup near me" — have something to find. See all plans →
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The site collects the request; it doesn't run your routes or your billing, and we won't pretend it does. A quote or assessment form sends each lead to your email, and your buttons can link to whatever you already schedule with — Jobber, Yardbook, a calendar link, or just your phone number. If you invoice through one of those tools, keep doing that; the site's job is to keep leads coming in.
Yes. Sign up — no credit card — and free credits cover generating the full site and previewing every page. A plan only enters the picture when you want it live: Maker is $10/month, and each plan starts with a 5-day free trial.
Yes. Point a domain you already own at the site or register a new one, from the Maker plan up. Hosting and the SSL certificate are handled for you, so the padlock shows up at yourcompany.com without you touching a setting.
Yes — that's the point. Open your site from the truck, upload the shots you just took, and tell the AI where they go: "add these to the gallery, patio section." No designer, no laptop, no waiting for the weekend.
No — you re-aim it. Keep the same pages and tell the AI to lead with spring cleanups in March and leaf removal in October; that's a one-minute chat edit, not a rebuild. Seasonal updates also give locals searching "fall cleanup near me" a page that actually says it.
Describe your crew's work in one sentence — the site is done before the trailer's unloaded.
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