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Ultimate Guide

The Complete Guide to Home Care Marketing

Home care agencies run on referrals — until the referrals stop. This guide is for agency owners who want a marketing system that works even when the discharge planners are busy and the competitors are cutting prices.

Eleven chapters. Each one covers a specific channel or strategy in enough depth to understand what it is, why it works, and whether it fits your agency. The how-to playbooks live in the paid course.

10 Chapters

1
Home Care Marketing Strategies
Home care agencies market on three fronts simultaneously — clients, caregivers, and referral sources. This guide covers all three. It also covers the math: a single private-pay client generates roughly $26,000 in year one, which makes home care one of the few industries where the marketing economics are genuinely in your favor. We analyzed 64,380 home care agencies across every channel families and caregivers use to find them. This guide is built on what we found.
2
Caregiver Recruitment Marketing
We mapped caregiver job search visibility across hundreds of markets. Indeed controls 97.2% of them — not most, 97.2%. Papa.com, a competing platform, appears in 57% of caregiver job search results. And [the average caregiver turnover rate in home care sits at 65% annually](/research/home-care-caregiver-job-search-study). That's the recruiting problem in three numbers.
3
Referral Marketing for Home Care
Pull your client records right now. Not from memory — actually pull them. Look at where your last twenty clients came from. Most agency owners who do this exercise see the same thing: two or three sources sent almost everything. The rest of the column is noise.
4
How to Get Private Pay Home Care Clients
A family called three agencies last Tuesday. Their father fell at home on Saturday. By Monday he was discharged from the hospital and the discharge planner handed them a list. They called in order. The first two answered. The third went to voicemail.
5
Home Care Website Design
We analyzed 64,380 home care agency websites. [Eighty percent have no schema markup](/research/home-care-gbp-completeness) — meaning Google can't properly understand what they do or who they serve. Most load slowly on mobile. Most bury the phone number. Most answer the wrong question.
6
Google Local SEO for Home Care
We analyzed 64,380 home care agencies. [The average Google Business Profile scores 65.8 out of 100 for completeness](/research/home-care-gbp-completeness). [One in three has zero reviews](/research/home-care-google-reviews-study). [Thirty-seven percent of home care queries now trigger a Google AI Overview](/research/home-care-ai-search-visibility). [Facebook appears in 77% of home care search result pages](/research/home-care-directory-study). Most agencies are losing the local search game before the family ever types a word.
7
Google Ads for Home Care
A well-built campaign puts your agency at the top of search results within 48 hours of launch, visible to families who are actively searching right now. There's no waiting for SEO to compound, no content calendar, no algorithm to court. You pay to be seen, the family calls, and you close the case.
8
Home Care Lead Generation
Before you can build a lead pipeline, you need to understand what a lead is actually worth. Most owners underbuild their pipeline because they underestimate what it's worth to fill it. Get the math right first, and every channel decision that follows becomes obvious.
9
Email Marketing for Home Care
Most agencies ignore email entirely. They post on Facebook twice a month, run a Google ad or two, and assume that's marketing. Meanwhile, a stack of business cards sits in a desk drawer. Past inquiries that never converted sit in a spreadsheet nobody opens. Referral source contacts from the last three hospital visits sit in a phone's notes app.
10
Social Media for Home Care
We analyzed 64,380 home care agencies. [Facebook appears in 77% of home care SERPs](/research/home-care-directory-study) — search engine results pages. That means when someone searches your agency name, or searches for home care in your city, your Facebook page is likely showing up on the first page of results. It is a de facto search result. It just doesn't behave like one.