Post ideas

Pest Control Rodent Post Ideas (Mice & Rats)

Rodent season writes its own content calendar. These are real mouse and rat posts built for a pest control company's feed, framed to inform a homeowner and show your expertise rather than gross them out.

Gallery · 6 posts

Rodents pest control social media post: A rat in armor is still a rat. Your home is your kingdom, and the only crown that belongs Home Guide
A rat in armor is still a rat. Your home is your kingdom, and the only crown that belongs in it is yours. When the scouts arrive, the colony is already mapping your floor plan. We end the campaign before the rest of the army shows up.

Home Guide

A specific, actionable prevention tip a homeowner can do this weekend. Built on operator-grade micro-knowledge: the threshold, the mechanism, the measurement.

Rodents pest control social media post: Most pest problems start with one decision: did the outside stay outside? Every season has Seasonal Helper
Most pest problems start with one decision: did the outside stay outside? Every season has its entry pattern. Spring is termites and ants. Summer is wasps and spiders. Fall is mice and stink bugs. The work is the same year-round: notice what's changing on your house before they do.

Seasonal Helper

Timed to the calendar. Entry windows, breeding triggers, and prevention deadlines that move with the season, so customers see you as the local voice that knows when to act.

Rodents pest control social media post: Stand outside your front door at night with the porch light off and look at the seam where Home Guide
Stand outside your front door at night with the porch light off and look at the seam where the door meets the threshold. If you see daylight coming through from inside, so does every spider, mouse, and ant in the yard. A twelve-dollar strip of weatherstripping is the cheapest pest control in the world.

Home Guide

A specific, actionable prevention tip a homeowner can do this weekend. Built on operator-grade micro-knowledge: the threshold, the mechanism, the measurement.

Rodents pest control social media post: A gap the size of a quarter is enough for a roof rat, a starling, or a flying squirrel to Home Guide
A gap the size of a quarter is enough for a roof rat, a starling, or a flying squirrel to set up shop in your attic. Walk the perimeter and look up at the eave and gable vents. If you can see daylight through torn screen mesh, that opening has been advertised to the entire neighborhood. Patch the mesh before you patch the problem.

Home Guide

A specific, actionable prevention tip a homeowner can do this weekend. Built on operator-grade micro-knowledge: the threshold, the mechanism, the measurement.

Want posts like these for your company?

The Pest Post writes and posts content like this for pest control operators every week.