How to Get More Clients as a Dog Groomer - 6 Proven Strategies

Getting your first clients is one challenge. Getting to fully booked - and staying there - is another. This guide covers six specific, practical strategies that dog groomers use to build a consistent, growing client base without spending money on advertising.

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In this guide
  1. The honest reality of getting new grooming clients
  2. Step 1 - Get your Google Business Profile right
  3. Step 2 - Build a system for getting Google reviews
  4. Step 3 - Use Instagram as a local discovery tool
  5. Step 4 - Turn your existing clients into a referral machine
  6. Step 5 - Be present in local Facebook groups
  7. Step 6 - Keep clients coming back

The honest reality of getting new grooming clients

Most dog groomers get their first clients through word of mouth - a friend recommends them, a neighbour asks for their number, someone posts in a local Facebook group. That is a great start. But word of mouth alone is slow, unpredictable, and completely outside your control.

The groomers who get consistently fully booked - often with a waiting list - are doing the same thing as word of mouth, just at scale. They are making it easy for strangers to find them, trust them, and book them. This guide covers exactly how to do that.

Step 1 - Get your Google Business Profile right

When someone in your town types "dog groomer near me" into Google, the three businesses that appear in the map results get the overwhelming majority of clicks. This is called the Local Pack, and it is the single most valuable piece of digital real estate available to a local service business.

Getting into the Local Pack is entirely free. It requires claiming and optimising your Google Business Profile. Here is what to focus on:

The most important thing: Google reviews. A profile with 20 reviews and a 4.8 rating will beat a competitor with a perfect profile and no reviews every single time. Getting Google reviews is the highest-return activity a groomer can do for their local visibility.

Step 2 - Build a system for getting Google reviews

Most satisfied clients do not leave reviews - not because they did not enjoy the experience, but because they forget or did not know it mattered. Your job is to make it easy and ask at the right moment.

The right moment to ask

Ask immediately after the appointment when the client picks up their dog. This is peak satisfaction - they have just seen their dog looking amazing. A simple "If you enjoyed today, a quick Google review would really help us out - here is the link" is all it takes.

Make it frictionless

Respond to every review

Always respond to reviews - both positive and negative. A thoughtful response to a negative review actually builds more trust than no negative reviews at all. It shows you care and you are professional.

Step 3 - Use Instagram as a local discovery tool

Instagram is not just a portfolio - it is a search engine for local services. When someone new moves to your area and gets a dog, there is a strong chance they will search Instagram for a local groomer before they search Google.

The three things that convert Instagram followers into bookings are:

  1. Consistent before and after posts - this is your proof. New visitors need to see the quality of your work immediately.
  2. Local hashtags and location tags - tagging your city in every post makes you discoverable to local pet owners
  3. A clear bio with a booking call to action - your bio should say what you do, where you are, and how to book. "Dog groomer in [city] • DM to book • link for availability"

Step 4 - Turn your existing clients into a referral machine

Your current clients are your most powerful marketing channel. A recommendation from a trusted friend is worth a hundred Instagram posts. The question is how to make referrals happen reliably rather than waiting for them to happen by chance.

Simply ask

Most groomers never ask their clients directly. A simple message to your regulars - "If you know anyone with a dog who needs a groomer, I would really appreciate you passing my name along" - produces results immediately. People want to help, they just need the nudge.

Offer an incentive

A small discount on the next appointment for a successful referral creates a genuine reason for clients to mention you. It does not need to be large - even a free nail trim is enough to make people think of you when a friend asks for a recommendation.

Step 5 - Be present in local Facebook groups

Local Facebook groups - neighbourhood groups, dog owner groups, local buy-and-sell groups - are where your potential clients spend time. Being a known, helpful presence in these groups builds the kind of trust that turns into bookings.

The key is to be genuinely helpful rather than promotional. Answer grooming questions. Share useful tips. When someone posts asking for a groomer recommendation, you want other group members to tag you because they know your name and trust your work.

What not to do: Do not join a group and immediately post an ad for your business. This gets you ignored at best and removed at worst. Be a person first, a business second.

Step 6 - Keep clients coming back

Getting a new client costs far more time and effort than keeping an existing one. The easiest way to grow a fully booked grooming business is to make sure the clients you already have come back every 6 to 8 weeks without needing to be chased.


The compounding effect

None of these strategies produces results overnight. But each one compounds. A good Google profile brings in 2 new clients a month. Those clients leave reviews, which brings in 2 more. You ask for referrals, which brings in another 3. You post consistently on Instagram, which brings in 2 more. Within 6 months you are looking at a waiting list.

The groomers who struggle to stay booked are usually doing none of these things systematically. The ones who are turning people away are doing all of them, consistently, without overthinking it.

Need help with the social media side of things?

Fur Socials handles your Instagram content every month - branded templates, captions, hashtags, and a content calendar built specifically for dog groomers and pet sitters. From €39 per month.

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