Most Australian trade businesses buying leads from online marketplaces have no idea the same enquiry is being sold to four or five competitors at the same moment. This is how the model actually works - and why it is costing established businesses far more than the invoice suggests.
A homeowner in Brisbane wants three quotes for a solar system. They fill out a form on a lead marketplace - takes about 90 seconds. They hit submit. What happens next is invisible to them, and almost always invisible to you.
That single enquiry - one person, one property, one job - is immediately sold to multiple trade businesses simultaneously. Typically three to five, sometimes more, depending on how many businesses are buying leads in that postcode that day. Each of them pays for it. Each of them gets the same name, same number, same address.
Every one of you is now in a race.
A shared lead marketplace makes money by selling the same consumer enquiry as many times as possible. Their revenue goes up when more businesses compete for the same leads. Their incentives and your interests are structurally opposed.
The marketplace gets paid regardless of who wins the job - or whether anyone does. They are not a lead generation partner. They are an auction house. You are a bidder. And every other tradie in your postcode who signed up last month is sitting at the same table.
This is not a knock on the platforms themselves. It is just what the model is. The problem is that most trade businesses signing up to buy leads have not had it described this way - and the performance data tells a very different story from the marketing material.
Understanding why shared leads convert so poorly starts with understanding what happens on the other side of the enquiry - the homeowner's phone in the minutes and hours after they submit.
They wanted quotes. They got a queue of callers.
This is not an edge case. It is the typical experience for a homeowner who submits to a shared lead platform in a competitive market. The volume of contact does not build trust - it destroys it. By the time a measured, professional business calls two hours later, the homeowner has already decided they do not want to deal with any of them.
The result is not just a missed job. It is a missed job that you already paid for.
Let us look at what shared leads actually cost when you account for the real close rate - not the number the platform uses in their pitch.
A typical shared lead in a competitive trade vertical in Australia costs between $30 and $90. At face value, that looks reasonable. But the relevant number is not the cost per lead. It is the cost per job won.
Take a solar business buying 50 shared leads per month at $60 each. That is $3,000 in lead spend. At a 10% close rate, they win five jobs. Cost per job won: $600 in lead fees alone.
Now consider the same business running an exclusive lead system at a 50% close rate. To win the same five jobs, they only need to generate ten leads. At a higher cost per exclusive lead - say $120 each - that is $1,200 in total. The cost per job won drops to $240 - less than half.
The shared lead looks cheap on the invoice. The exclusive lead looks expensive. But the only number that matters to a business doing $500k a year is the cost per job actually won - and that number consistently favours exclusivity once you account for what you are actually competing against.
Shared leads are not a cheap version of exclusive leads. They are a fundamentally different product. One gives you an enquiry. The other gives you a chance in a race. Pricing them the same way makes about as much sense as paying the same amount for a lottery ticket as you would for a confirmed booking.
Most businesses shopping for leads compare headline price per lead and nothing else. Here is what the comparison actually looks like across the metrics that determine whether leads turn into revenue.
To be fair: shared leads are not useless for everyone. There are situations where the model can work - and being honest about that matters more than a blanket takedown.
If you have just started out, have no ad budget, and need volume fast to learn your sales process, shared lead marketplaces can generate activity while you build. The close rates are low, but the barrier to entry is minimal and you are not ready for a full lead system anyway. Use them to practise. Use them to build case studies. Do not use them as a long-term growth engine.
This is the pattern that catches established businesses. They start on shared leads, get decent at converting, and scale up. But the economics never improve - they just get more expensive. A business closing at 12% on shared leads is spending a lot of money to compete against itself. The ceiling is baked into the model.
The businesses doing $600k, $1m, $2m a year in trade revenue - the ones with proven teams, solid processes, and the capacity to handle consistent volume - are consistently the worst fit for shared lead marketplaces. The model does not scale with the business. It just gets louder and more expensive as you push more volume through it.
For most established trade businesses, the question is not whether to stop buying shared leads. It is whether to stop buying shared leads now, or wait until the pain is high enough to make the decision obvious. Most wait too long.
A lead is not a lead if four other businesses received the same enquiry at the same moment. That is an auction entry.
Exclusive lead generation is not a premium version of the shared lead marketplace. It is a structurally different approach - and understanding the difference matters before making any investment decision.
In a shared lead model, the platform sits between you and the homeowner. The homeowner submits to the platform. The platform distributes to you. The homeowner has no idea who you are until you call them cold.
In an exclusive model, the homeowner submits directly to your business. They see your brand, your credentials, your offer - before they enter their contact details. They have opted in specifically to hear from you. When your team follows up, it is not a cold call. It is the call they were expecting.
That single structural difference explains almost the entire gap in conversion rates between the two models.
The businesses getting the best results from exclusive lead generation are not running a better version of what a lead marketplace does. They own the entire mechanism - the ad campaigns, the landing pages, the qualification survey, the follow-up automation, the CRM pipeline. Everything sits in their own accounts and serves only their business.
When a homeowner submits, no one else in the country receives that lead. The follow-up runs within 60 seconds under the business name the homeowner already recognises. The conversation starts from a completely different place.
Building an exclusive lead system costs more upfront than signing up for a lead marketplace subscription. That is true and worth stating plainly. The comparison is not the upfront cost - it is the cost per job won over 12 months.
For a business generating 20 jobs a month from shared leads at $600 cost per job won, the annual lead spend to maintain that volume sits around $144,000 - with nothing owned, no brand built, and no compounding infrastructure at the end of it. The same 20 jobs per month from an owned exclusive system typically lands well under half that figure - with a system that belongs to you and improves over time.
The shared lead marketplace model has been around long enough for the data to be clear. It generates activity. It does not generate the kind of consistent, predictable, owned pipeline that serious trade businesses need to scale past the referral plateau.
That is not a criticism of the businesses running those platforms. It is just a description of what the model produces and who it is - and is not - suited for.
If your business is doing $500k a year or more, has a team that can handle consistent volume, and has a proven process for converting enquiries into jobs - you have outgrown the shared lead model. The infrastructure that helped you get here is now the ceiling on where you go next.
The businesses growing past $1m, $2m, $5m in trade revenue are not buying leads from a marketplace. They have built a system that generates demand for their specific business, in their specific territory, at a cost per job won that makes sense at scale.
That is the only version of lead generation worth building toward. Everything else is renting someone else's race track.
QuoteLeads builds complete exclusive lead generation systems for established Australian trade businesses. Not a marketplace subscription. A system built into your business that you own from day one.