The guy drives in your shop and wants you t put a nice brand on his red truck doors. Sheesh! you guys talk him to death with your philosophy on business and layout, Toad gives him a medical history survey to fill out, come on, a quick rough and you get to work. No wonder the big discussion on minimum money on a job. You guys would take forever and all 99% of you are going to do is throw some type out there and put want he wants.
And please if I see another modern take on a tree or leaf that you saw on the internet I am going to puke.
But to tell the truth, this OP is not going to make a better layout no matter how much is said or shown. They might ask Visual800 what fonts he used and make them white to go over red. They won't use my idea because it is not a computer font or clipart that can be purchased for $49.99 this month on a special deal.
Just read where Uber is starting a lawn care business. Maybe even put snow plows on the front of their cars in winter. Just call when you have snow and they come right over.
Forgive some of us for actually taking our craft and vocation seriously enough to want to practice it to our fullest potential and to our client's maximum benefit. Our shop does a fair amount of logo design that extends beyond our client's signage needs, so we treat that part of our business with a high attention to detail and finding ways we can minimize miscommunication and guesswork. Every misunderstanding or misreading of the client's needs on a logo design cuts into the budget that in a small business scenario is usually under $1,000.
I've never met a well educated or professional graphic designer with experience who doesn't do something similar or at least ask a series of probing questions to determine the scope of the project.
I'd be curious to know what other signmakers who also provide graphic design services do to collect the necessary information from clients before starting on a logo design project.