Introduction
If you’re marketing a moving company in 2025 and still relying solely on discounts, flyers, and Google Ads, you’re already behind.
Consumers today want more than just a service—they want a feeling, a story, and a brand they can trust. Enter Austin Yarborough, owner of Central Coast Moving & Storage. In Part 2 of his interview on the Movified Podcast, Austin breaks down how he built brand visibility, loyalty, and sales using emotional marketing, a Golden Ticket reward strategy, and deep investment in sales team training and company culture.
This blog is your playbook for learning how to market a moving company with personality, purpose, and precision.
Key Takeaways
What You’ll Learn:
- Use emotional triggers and brand storytelling to capture attention
- Implement a reward-based strategy to generate calls and referrals
- Train your sales team daily using objection handling frameworks
- Build brand consistency through personal branding and visibility
- Set KPIs, growth targets, and core values to scale with culture
Table of Contents
Why Emotion Sells in the Moving Industry
Marketing a moving company goes beyond logos and slogans. Austin’s biggest insight? Emotion moves people more than logic.
“Every single piece of our marketing is designed to make someone feel something. Excited. Curious. Cared for.” — Austin Yarborough
Relocation is already a highly emotional experience. Whether it’s the joy of a new home or the stress of transition, your brand can be the steady hand during that time. Emotional branding allows your company to build trust and relatability.
This approach stands out in an industry crowded with robotic emails and generic CTAs. Instead, Austin suggests creating marketing that feels personal: mailers that pop, branded experiences that spark joy, and communication that resonates.
The Golden Ticket Strategy: Ditch Discounts, Offer Rewards
Discounts scream “cheap.” Rewards feel like “value.”
Austin replaced old-school couponing with a physical, shiny, Willy Wonka-style Golden Ticket that offers $100 in rewards toward moving services.
Why it works:
- Eye-catching: Glossy, gold, and tangible—it immediately stands out
- Emotionally engaging: It triggers excitement, nostalgia, and curiosity
- Versatile: Can be inserted into folders, handed to realtors, mailed to leads
- Non-discountable: Preserves service value by avoiding undercutting
“We’re not doing discounts in 2025. We’re doing rewards. It changes the whole conversation.” — Austin Yarborough
He pairs these tickets with a realtor kit: two business cards (one for the client, one for the realtor), branded pens, and printed brochures in custom folders.
Tool Used: MovingLetters.ai — sends AI-generated handwritten mailers with Golden Tickets included
Real Impact:
- Clients call asking about the ticket
- Kids are excited by it
- Realtors remember him for it
Sales Team Mastery: The Power of Roleplaying & Word Tracks
Austin emphasizes that a moving company lives or dies by its sales team. Training shouldn’t be optional—it should be daily.
His team meets every morning to:
- Review common objections
- Practice the “Agree – Assure – Transition” framework
- Sharpen word tracks and tone
“Agree – Assure – Transition” Example:
Customer: “You’ve called me too many times.”
- Agree: You’re right—we’ve been reaching out a lot.
- Assure: That’s because we care about getting you the right information.
- Transition: I’m here to make your move go smoothly. What concerns do you have?
Why This Works:
- Increases close rates
- Prevents ghosting
- Builds confidence and energy on the team
“If you don’t roleplay, your team is winging it. And you’re bleeding leads.” — Mark Hirschi
Brand Consistency: How Austin Became His Own Billboard
Austin takes personal branding to the next level.
He wears:
- Central Coast polos
- Name tags
- Matching slacks and shoes
Everywhere.
“People may not remember my name, but they remember the guy in the blue polo who shows up at every event.”
He ensures:
- Uniform branding at every event
- Realtors see him as a local expert
- His company is always top-of-mind
This visibility transforms him into an extension of the brand.
Culture & KPIs: Growing a Business That Runs Without You
Austin’s 2025 goal: take a month off with zero calls from the business. But to do that, 2025 has to be built on structure.
Here’s his playbook:
- Growth Target: 30% increase in revenue
- Profit Margin: 20% minimum
- KPI Dashboard: Green (on-target), Yellow (needs attention), Red (off-target)
- Employee Ladder: Moving Associate 1 → Crew Leader → Driver 5
Core Values:
- Grands UNR: Kindness, courtesy, and respect to all clients
- Kaizen: 1% better each day (inspired by Atomic Habits)
- Five-Star Focus: Deliver Ritz-Carlton-level experiences
“1% better every day is 37x better at year-end.” — Austin Yarborough
Why Choose Movified
Movified is the trusted voice of the moving industry. Led by Mark Hirschi, owner of Salmon’s Transfer and Ellis Moving, the podcast and blog deliver real-world strategies from people who have built million-dollar moving companies.
Here’s what sets us apart:
- Real owners, real conversations
- Actionable tactics, not just ideas
- Industry-specific SEO, marketing, and sales tools
🎧 Related Episodes:
- Scaling a Moving Brand with Social Media | Steven Mandac
- Franchising Your Moving Company | TM from Let’s Get Moving
- Hiring Movers Who Show Up | Winston Davis
Conclusion
Marketing a moving company in 2025 requires more than an ad budget. It requires empathy, creativity, structure, and systems. Whether you’re building a brand from scratch or leveling up an existing operation, Austin’s insights offer a roadmap:
- Replace discounts with rewards
- Train your team daily
- Show up in your brand everywhere
- Set bold KPIs and stick to them
- Grow 1% every single day
“Be a better version of yourself on and off the truck, and success will follow.” — Austin Yarborough

Meet The Host
Mark Hirschi is the founder and host of Movified. With over a decade in the moving and storage industry, Mark combines real-world leadership experience with a passion for mentorship and elevating industry standards.