Real talk about the South Florida calendar
Real talk — service businesses in South Florida don’t have one busy season. They have a calendar of micro-seasons, each one with its own customer, its own urgency, and its own search pattern. The contractors who plan around that calendar stay booked year-round. The ones who react to it scramble for the leftovers.
This is Part 5 of the Local Service Business Playbook. Part 1 audited your Google Business Profile. Part 2 covered service area pages. Part 3 built the review engine. Part 4 fixed lead response time. This part is the timing layer — how to read the South Florida seasonal calendar and get your marketing in front of customers before the season hits, not during.
Seasonal marketing for service businesses in Broward isn’t optional. It’s the difference between a business that’s slammed in October and idle in May, and one that’s evenly booked because it planned for both.
Why timing beats budget for seasonal SEO
Here’s the thing about seasonal search traffic that most owners get wrong: you can’t catch it in the moment. SEO content takes 8-12 weeks to mature into ranking position. Google Trends data for South Florida service searches shows the pattern clearly — hurricane-related searches start climbing in late May, AC searches spike June through September, holiday-related home services climb in November.
If you publish “hurricane prep for your roof” in June, you’re competing against content published in March that’s already ranking. The customer searching in June finds the March content, not yours.
The businesses that win seasonal traffic publish 2-3 months ahead. We covered the specific case in depth in hurricane-season marketing for South Florida — but hurricanes are just one season on a calendar full of them.
The South Florida seasonal calendar for service businesses
Around here, the year breaks into distinct micro-seasons. Each one is a marketing window that opens 8-12 weeks before the demand.
Snowbird season (November – April)
South Florida’s population swells from November through April as seasonal residents return. For service businesses, this is prime time — these are homeowners with second properties that need maintenance, repairs, and upgrades they put off all summer.
Marketing window opens: September. Target searches like “home watch service Pembroke Pines,” “seasonal home maintenance Weston,” “open up house for season Broward.” The snowbird customer in Century Village or Bonaventure is searching in September-October for help getting their place ready.
Pre-summer AC rush (March – May)
Before the brutal summer heat, smart homeowners service their AC. The ones who don’t end up calling in July when the unit fails in 95-degree heat. The pre-summer service push is the highest-margin window for HVAC businesses.
Marketing window opens: January-February. “AC tune-up before summer,” “AC maintenance Pembroke Pines,” “is my AC ready for summer.” Position the spring inspection as the thing that prevents the July emergency.
Hurricane season (June – November, peak August-October)
The big one. Covered in depth in our hurricane marketing guide. The marketing window opens in March. Roofers, tree services, generator installers, and AC contractors all see demand spikes. The content published in March ranks by June.
Summer peak (June – September)
Brutal heat, afternoon storms, peak AC failures. Pool services, AC repair, and anything cooling-related runs flat-out. The challenge isn’t generating demand — it’s capturing it fast enough. This is where lead response time from Part 4 matters most. The customer with no AC in August calls five contractors and hires whoever answers.
Holiday season (November – December)
Home improvement before holiday guests arrive. Cleaning services, handyman work, landscaping, and anything that makes a home guest-ready spikes in the three weeks before Thanksgiving and again before the December holidays.
Marketing window opens: September. “Get your home ready for the holidays,” “pre-holiday deep cleaning Hollywood,” “handyman before guests arrive.”
New Year reset (January)
The “this year I’ll finally fix it” season. Home projects people resolved to handle. Renovations, upgrades, deferred maintenance. The customer who spent December at family gatherings noticing everything wrong with their house calls in January.
Marketing window opens: November. Position around fresh starts and the projects they’ve been putting off.
The seasonal content system
You don’t write seasonal content during the season. You build a content calendar that publishes ahead of each window. Here’s the working system for a Broward service business:
- January: Publish pre-summer AC content + New Year project content (for the spring rush)
- March: Publish hurricane prep content (for the June-October season)
- May: Publish summer peak content + finalize emergency response infrastructure
- September: Publish snowbird season + holiday prep content
- November: Publish New Year reset content (for January demand)
Each piece of content matures over 8-12 weeks and ranks right as the season’s searches peak. The content also becomes a permanent asset — next year, it’s already ranking, and you just refresh it with updated dates and stats.
The Google Business Profile seasonal moves
Beyond blog content, your Google Business Profile needs seasonal adjustments:
- Seasonal posts. GBP posts expire. Post seasonal offers and tips 2-3 weeks before each window — “Book your pre-summer AC tune-up now.”
- Seasonal photos. Upload photos relevant to the current season. Storm prep work in May. Holiday-ready homes in November.
- Special hours. Set holiday hours 3 months out for every holiday — Memorial Day, July 4th, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, the December holidays.
- Seasonal attributes. Toggle “emergency service” prominently during hurricane and summer seasons.
The thing about Broward customers — they check your GBP before they call. A profile that reflects the current season reads as an active, attentive business. A profile with a Christmas photo still up in March reads as neglected.
The seasonal email and social rhythm
If you’ve built an email list, the seasonal calendar drives your send schedule. One seasonal email before each window:
- “Hurricane season starts June 1 — here’s your prep checklist” (sent late May)
- “Summer’s coming — is your AC ready?” (sent April)
- “Get your home holiday-ready” (sent early November)
Each one written once, scheduled to send every year. The seasonal email is the highest-open-rate email most service businesses send because it lands exactly when the customer is starting to think about that exact problem.
The mistakes most Broward service businesses make
From watching the seasonal patterns play out across South Florida:
- Reacting instead of planning. Publishing hurricane content in June. By then the ranking window has closed.
- Ignoring the shoulder seasons. Everyone fights for summer AC. Fewer businesses market the pre-summer tune-up window, which is higher-margin and less competitive.
- Treating South Florida like it has four normal seasons. It doesn’t. The calendar here is snowbird, pre-summer, hurricane, summer peak, holiday, and New Year. Plan around the real calendar, not the one on the wall.
- Forgetting to refresh last year’s seasonal content. The hurricane post from last March is still ranking. Update the dates and stats each February and it keeps working.
The 90-day seasonal planning exercise
One sitting. Look at the next 90 days:
- Identify which season is 8-12 weeks out. That’s the one to be marketing for right now.
- Check whether you have content ranking for it. Search the relevant terms. Are you on page 1? If not, that’s the gap.
- Plan one piece of seasonal content to publish this month. It’ll mature in time for the season.
- Schedule the GBP posts, the seasonal email, and the social posts for 2-3 weeks before the demand window.
- Set a reminder to refresh last year’s seasonal content if you have any.
If you only do one thing this week — figure out which season is coming in 8-12 weeks, and start one piece of content for it now.
What’s coming in Part 6
Part 6 of this playbook covers citations and local backlinks — what still matters for local SEO in 2026, what’s become noise, and where to spend your limited link-building time for the biggest local ranking impact.
Seasonal marketing planned and executed for you: the full seasonal content calendar, GBP management, and timing strategy for South Florida service businesses runs through our SEO and lead generation service. The website that converts the seasonal traffic runs through our web design service. We don’t grow unless you do — and the businesses that plan their seasons are the ones that grow steadily instead of in panicked bursts.
Final Thoughts
South Florida’s service-business calendar is one of the most predictable in the country. Snowbirds come in November. Heat comes in June. Storms come in August. Holidays come in December. None of it is a surprise — and yet most service businesses market for each season after it arrives.
Plan 8-12 weeks ahead. Publish before the window opens. Refresh what worked last year. The contractors who treat the seasonal calendar as a planning tool stay booked while everyone else scrambles.
Further Reading
If you want to dig into seasonal marketing and local search timing, here are reputable sources worth bookmarking:
- Google Trends — Search Trend Data
- Think with Google — Seasonal Marketing Research
- National Weather Service Miami — South Florida Seasonal Patterns
- Sterling Sky — Local Search Articles
- Visit Florida — Florida Tourism and Seasonal Data



