10 Jan – 10 Feb 2026
The whole Google Ads screen, untouched. Blue tile counts phone calls — 140 in 32 days. Green tile is what they cost: $1.94K. Divide one into the other and every ringing phone came in around $14.
Free this month — I'll tear down your Google Ads and show you what's wasting money. Get mine →
Not clicks. Not reports. Your phone ringing with people standing next to a vehicle that won't move, in the ZIP codes you actually cover — who need a truck in the next twenty minutes and will pay for one.
I'll look at what you're running now and send you a short video showing where the money's going. No charge, no call required, no obligation.
Almost every account I open has at least three of these running. Fixing them is most of the job.
"How much does towing cost", "tow truck jobs", "cheap car removal" — clicks from students, job hunters and scrap sellers. Nobody's calling. You're still billed.
Your budget gets spread across banner ads nobody clicks and "smart" settings nobody checks. The one search that actually books tows never gets funded.
Ad live at 3am, phone going to voicemail. That click cost you money and the caller rang the next guy within ten seconds.
No call tracking means no proof. You can't tell a booked tow from a wrong number, so you can't tell if any of it's working.
Four steps, in order. No strategy deck, no six-week onboarding.
Your service area, your job types, what a tow is actually worth to you — and what your competitors are bidding on right now.
Your ad shows to someone typing "tow truck near me" at 6pm on the interstate. It does not show to students, scrap sellers or people price-shopping for next Tuesday.
Ads go live inside 7 days, in your service radius, at the hours someone actually answers the phone.
Every call tracked and recorded. At day 30 we tally the qualified ones. Under 20? You don't pay my fee.
Full screens straight out of Google Ads — nothing cropped, nothing rearranged. The only thing touched is the client's name and email in the top corner. Tap any board to enlarge it and read the whole thing yourself.
10 Jan – 10 Feb 2026
The whole Google Ads screen, untouched. Blue tile counts phone calls — 140 in 32 days. Green tile is what they cost: $1.94K. Divide one into the other and every ringing phone came in around $14.
1 – 16 May 2026
Sixteen days, $1.26K spent, 98 calls — about $13 a call. The red tile says "conversions": that's Google's word and it counts more than just calls. Ignore it. Blue is the one that pays your drivers.
1 – 11 Jul 2026
Eleven days, 66 calls, $845 spent — $12.80 a call. Look at the small arrows under each tile: calls up 25 and cost per result down $5.31 versus the stretch before it. Same yard, same trucks, less waste. Top of the screen even shows it flagged "limited by budget" — it had more to give.
20 – 30 Jun 2026
A smaller yard on a smaller budget: $570 over eleven days, 41 calls, about $13.90 each. A third of the spend of the top account and the price per call barely moved. Budget size isn't what makes this work.
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Cost per call is the ad spend divided by the calls it produced — no other math. These are historical results from live client accounts over the dated windows shown. Your market, your competition and your truck availability will produce different numbers, which is exactly why the 30-day count is the only promise I make.
You get a lot of messages from marketing people. Most of them won't tell you their name, won't tell you what they'll do, and want a deposit before anything happens. I'd be skeptical of me too.
So I do it backwards. I show you what's wrong with your ads before you pay me anything. Then I put my own fee on the line against a number we agree on up front — twenty qualified job calls in thirty days. If your phone doesn't ring twenty times, I don't get paid. That's not a marketing promise, it's just how I work.
One thing I won't do: take your money and disappear. You'll have my email, my number and the login to your own ad account from day one. If I go quiet, you can shut the whole thing off yourself without asking me.
Zaid Raza
Founder, TowHaus
Flatbeds, rollbacks, wreckers. Accident recovery, private property impounds, roadside, heavy and specialty. If a phone call turns into a job, we should talk.
I take a limited number of contractors and I won't run ads against an existing client in the same service area. If you can't answer the phone, or you're chasing the cheapest possible job, this won't work — and I'll say so on the first call rather than take your money.
Not a discount. Not a partial refund. If the tracked, qualified call count comes in under twenty at day 30, my management fee is zero and you keep everything we built.
A tracked inbound phone call, from a real person, inside your service area, asking for a tow or recovery you're set up to do. It's recorded, so neither of us has to take the other's word for it. Wrong numbers, sales calls, job applicants, suppliers and duplicate calls from the same number don't count toward the twenty.
You do, straight to Google, on your own card in your own account. I never touch your money and I don't mark spend up. The guarantee covers my management fee — that's the only thing I control, so it's the only thing I'm willing to put at risk.
Then we don't run ads at those hours. Every unanswered ad click is money set on fire, so I'd rather show your ad for twelve good hours than twenty-four bad ones. If you have an after-hours answering setup, we use it. If you don't, we schedule around reality.
No. Month to month, cancel with notice, and the ad account, campaigns, keyword lists, negatives and call data are yours to keep on the way out. A long contract is what agencies use when the results won't hold you on their own.
Usually, yes — and it's often faster than starting over, because your account already has conversion history worth keeping. I'll audit what's there first and tell you honestly whether it's a rebuild or a repair.
Inside seven days from the kick-off call, assuming I can get account access and a call-tracking number set up. The 30-day count starts the day the ads actually go live, not the day you sign.
One. If I'm running your ads, I'm not running ads for the outfit across town — you'd be bidding against yourself and paying me for the privilege. Once a metro is taken, it's taken.
Thirty days. Twenty qualified calls. If the number isn't there, neither is my invoice.
Tear down my ads — freeDrag sideways to read · tap outside to close