
If you’re a painting contractor, you know the feeling.
You start running numbers in your head.
How long can you keep the crew busy?
How many weeks of winter can payroll survive?
Most painting and coating contractors treat this as a fact of life.
The “slow season” shows up every year.
You brace for it. You ride it out. You pray spring comes early.
Wrong.
The slow season is not a weather problem. It is a planning problem.
That quiet phone in December was decided back in July, when you were too busy to think about winter.
Here’s the good news: a dead winter is not your fate.
The contractors who stay booked through the cold months do six specific things while everyone else waits and worries.
This post breaks down all six. No fluff. Just the moves that keep jobs on the schedule when your competitors have gone quiet.
Let’s get into it…
The Real Cost of Just Riding It Out

Let’s be honest about what a slow season actually does to you.
It is not only fewer jobs. It is the weight that comes with them.
Every quiet week, you pay to keep a business running that is not bringing money in.
That math gets ugly fast.
That is the part nobody likes to admit.
The slow season does not just shrink your revenue.
It wears down your confidence and breaks up your crew.
Here’s the thing: almost none of that is required.
The winter dip is real. The size of it is mostly your choice.
You cannot control the weather.
You can control how ready you are when it arrives.
Move 1: Stop Calling It the Slow Season. Call It the Winter Season.
It starts with the words you use.
“Slow season” is a decision you make before winter even shows up.
Say it enough, and you start planning for slow. You spend less. You market less. You expect the phone to go quiet, so it does.
Here’s the thing: winter is coming either way. Slow is optional.
The season is not the problem. The label is.
Call it the winter season instead.
It is a stretch of the calendar you plan around, not a sentence you have to serve.
You should still expect the cold months to look different.
That part is real.
But “slow” is not a forecast. It is a mindset.
And mindset shows up in how you run every move that follows.
Change the words, and you change how early you act.
Move 2: Plan Your Winter Season in July

The most expensive mistake is waiting.
Most contractors first think about winter in October.
By then, the window to fix it has already closed.
Marketing needs a running start.
Ads, content, and follow-up take weeks or months to turn into booked jobs.
If you want a full schedule in November and December, you start investing in June or July.
The leads you pay for this summer become the work you do this winter.
The same logic works on the sales side.
Some homeowners are price-conscious but flexible on timing. Use that to your advantage.
Take a deposit now and book the job for one of your slow weeks.
You fill a future gap today, while demand is high and you can pick your spots on the calendar.
Those deposits do one more thing. They put cash in your account during the months when cash is tightest.
Read that again. The work that beats winter happens in summer.
Move 3: Go Back to the Customers You Already Have

Your best source of winter jobs is already in your files.
That list is worth real money. Harvard Business Review found that winning a brand-new customer can cost five times more than keeping one you already have.
So before you spend another dollar chasing strangers, work the people who already know you.
Sort the list while you are at it. Past customers may be due for a refresh. Old quotes already told you they want the work.
Give them a reason to act now instead of in spring.
A simple offer with a deadline works best.
Something like, “We’re taking 10% off for the next five homeowners who book before December 15.”
The promotion is not the point.
The deadline is. Urgency turns a slow “maybe” into a signed job.
Move 4: Chase Commercial Work That Ignores Winter

Residential painting follows the seasons. Commercial work does not.
Office buildings, schools, warehouses, and medical facilities run on construction timelines and budgets, not on the weather.
A property manager repainting units in January does not care that it is cold outside.
That is exactly why commercial pays off.
These projects fill the months when residential goes quiet.
Here’s the catch: commercial runs on relationships, and relationships take time to build.
You do not need a giant crew to start.
A few smaller jobs for one general contractor can open the door to bigger projects later.
Base Coat Marketing works with residential and commercial painting contractors, plus concrete coating contractors, across the US and Canada.
A healthy mix of residential and commercial is one of the simplest ways to smooth out your revenue across the year.
Move 5: Stay on Screens 365 Days a Year

Homeowners stop calling in winter. They do not stop scrolling.
Pew Research found that 84% of U.S. adults use YouTube and 71% use Facebook, and many of them log on every single day.
They are watching on Christmas morning. They are watching in the dead of January.
Buyer intent might be low in the winter, but interest never sleeps.
Stay in front of people now, and you become the name they remember when they are finally ready in March.
How do you stay in front of them?
Get on camera.
Make short videos that answer the real questions you hear all day during your sales process.
This is the core of the Endless Customers approach.
You become the most trusted voice in your market by saying what other contractors will not say, and being more human than they are willing to be.
Make it a habit, not a one-time push.
Build those two videos into your normal process, and your content never runs dry.
Move 6: Stop Trying to Do All of This Alone

Here’s the catch: you already have a full-time job.
You are running crews, closing bids, and solving the problems only the owner can solve.
Planning summer campaigns, building a video habit, and courting commercial clients is a lot to pile on top of that.
This is where the right marketing partner earns its place.
A good one handles the planning, the ads, and the follow-up, so your schedule stays full while you stay focused on the work.
That is what we do at Base Coat Marketing. We help painting and coating contractors build marketing that keeps jobs coming in all year, not just during peak season.
The Bottom Line
The winter season splits contractors into two groups.
One group waits for winter, then scrambles.
The other group plans ahead, works their list, chases commercial work, and stays visible all year.
They walk into winter with jobs already on the books.
The difference is not luck. It is not your zip code.
It is the six moves above, started early enough to matter.
You do not have to dread the calendar anymore.
You can build a painting business that stays busy in every season.
Let’s build the plan that gets you there.









