Quick Answer: Pest control businesses can use ChatGPT to write seasonal treatment reminders, respond to Google reviews, create service page content for their website, draft follow-up emails after treatments, generate social media tips about pest prevention, and build trust-focused content that converts homeowners who are hesitant to call. This guide provides ready-to-use prompts for pest control operators.
ChatGPT Prompt Sets for Pest Control
Prompt Set 1: Google Business Profile and Seasonal Marketing
Seasonal Pest Alert Post
Write a Google Business Profile post warning homeowners about [seasonal pest, e.g., "termite swarm season," "ant invasion in spring," "mosquito season beginning"]. Mention 2-3 signs they have a problem and what to do. Company: [Name] in [City]. Include a call to action to schedule an inspection. Under 150 words. Educational, not fear-mongering.
Seasonal Treatment Reminder Email
Write an email to past customers reminding them to schedule their [seasonal treatment: e.g., "spring perimeter treatment," "fall rodent prevention"]. Company: [Name]. Service includes: [what's included]. Price: [$X or mention a seasonal discount]. How to book. Helpful reminder tone. Under 200 words.
Prompt Set 2: Website Content
Service Page Description
Write a 200-word description for the "[Pest Type, e.g., 'Termite Control']" service page of our pest control company website in [City]. Include: what this service covers, signs of infestation, why professional treatment is better than DIY, and what makes our treatment approach effective. Write for a worried homeowner. No scare tactics — reassuring expertise.
FAQ for Website
Write 5 FAQ questions and answers for our pest control company website. Customers ask: is pest control safe for my pets and children?, how long does treatment take?, how many treatments do I need?, do I have to leave my home during treatment?, do you offer a guarantee? Honest, reassuring answers. 50-75 words each. Company: [Name].
Prompt Set 3: Customer Communication
Post-Treatment Follow-Up
Write a follow-up email to send 2 weeks after a pest treatment. Company: [Name]. Ask how things are going, invite them to reach out if they see any activity, remind them of their warranty/follow-up treatment schedule, and ask for a Google review. Friendly, confident that the treatment worked. Under 150 words.
Negative Review Response
Write a professional, empathetic response to this Google review of our pest control company: "[paste review]". Acknowledge their concern, apologize for any issues, explain our process briefly, and invite them to contact us directly to make it right. Under 100 words. Never defensive.
Prompt Set 4: Social Media Content
Prevention Tip Social Post
Write a social media post with a practical pest prevention tip homeowners can implement themselves. Topic: [e.g., "5 ways to keep ants out of your kitchen," "how to make your home less attractive to rodents"]. Educational, positions us as experts. End with: "For serious infestations, call [Company Name]." Under 100 words.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should pest control companies have a blog?
Yes — pest control SEO is highly local and competitive, and blog posts like “termite warning signs in [City]” or “how to prevent cockroaches in [City] apartments” drive highly targeted organic traffic. AI makes publishing 2-4 posts monthly achievable. Homeowners searching for pest information are often close to calling — informative content converts these searchers.
What’s the best way to ask for reviews in pest control?
Send a text message (not email) 2-3 days after treatment completion with a direct Google review link. Text open rates are 5-8x higher than email. The timing matters: send when the customer can see the treatment is working, not immediately after. Include a personal note from the technician who did the work — this personal touch dramatically increases response rates.
More in the AI for Small Business Series
Next Steps
- Identify your biggest gap: Review the concepts in this guide and identify which one would have the most immediate impact on your business if you addressed it this week.
- Take one focused action: Choose the single most important takeaway from this guide and implement it before moving on to the next article.
- Measure your baseline: Before making any changes, note your current state — traffic, conversion rate, or whatever metric is most relevant — so you can measure whether your action worked.
- Return in 30 days: Check the specific metrics mentioned in this guide after 30 days of consistent implementation. Progress compounds over time.
- Connect your marketing channels: Use Krystl to see how all your marketing efforts are performing together — not just in isolation.
See which marketing channels are actually driving customers to your business
Krystl connects your website analytics, Google Business Profile, email, and ad platforms to show you what’s working and what to focus on. Built for small business owners who want clarity, not complexity.
Last Updated: April 2026 | Published by DigitalSMB
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