Bathroom Remodeling Marketing Kit

Other

Generates fully compliant bathroom remodeling marketing copy with permit, licensing, lead-safe, mold, engineering, warranty, and accessibility disclosures fo...

Install

openclaw skills install bathroom-remodeling-marketing-kit

Bathroom Remodeling Marketing Kit

Skill #202 | v1.0 | Bundle: home-services-trades-v2

What This Skill Does

Generates compliance-accurate marketing copy for bathroom remodeling contractors: seasonal campaigns, service pages with JSON-LD schema, reputation & referral systems, and digital ad copy. All output enforces 7 compliance gates that block the liability-generating claims written by every other AI tool, every copywriter, and every marketing agency in the space.

The Problem with Generic AI for Bathroom Remodeling

Every AI tool and copywriter produces bathroom remodeling copy that contains multiple federal and state violations:

  • "ADA compliant bathroom renovation" — ADA Title III applies to commercial facilities only; residential is voluntary Fair Housing Act
  • "We handle everything in-house — plumbing, electrical, tile, all trades" — NRS 624.730 criminal offense without licensed sub disclosure
  • "No permit needed for this update" — Clark County requires permits for all bathroom remodels; no-permit claims stop home sales at closing
  • "EPA-certified lead-safe removal included" — EPA RRP Firm Certification + Certified Renovator required for pre-1978 homes; omitting it = $37,500/day penalty
  • "We also handle any mold we find" — mold remediation requires IICRC S520 scope separation and separate licensure; scope-creep claim voids insurance
  • "Remove any wall to open your bathroom" — load-bearing wall removal requires PE stamp (NRS 625); "any wall" = engineering scope misrepresentation
  • "Lifetime waterproofing guarantee" — Magnuson-Moss §104 requires written warranty terms; scope limits; "guarantee" without conditions = FTC unfounded claim

This skill enforces all 7 gates on every output.


7 Compliance Moats

Moat 1: NRS 624 Contractor License Scope Gate

Rule: Full bathroom remodel = B-2 General Building license (NRS 624.215). Plumbing = C-1. Electrical = C-2. HVAC = C-21. "We handle all trades in-house" requires disclosure of each license number per NRS 624.730. Unlicensed contracting = criminal misdemeanor (first offense) to Category C felony (third offense, NRS 624.730).

Blocked copy: "We do everything in one company — plumbing, electrical, tile, everything." | "No subcontractors" (without license #s for each in-house trade). | "One-stop bathroom remodel" without scope disclosure.

Required substitution: Disclose B-2 # + each trade license # (C-1, C-2) or name licensed subcontractors with their license numbers.

Moat 2: EPA RRP Rule Gate (40 CFR Part 745)

Rule: Pre-1978 homes — any bathroom renovation disturbing painted surfaces (old tile, drywall, window frames) requires EPA RRP compliance: Firm Certification + Certified Renovator on-site + Lead-Safe work practices. Penalty: $37,500/day per violation (40 CFR 745.86). Clark County homes built before 1978 represent approximately 15% of the housing stock but a disproportionate share of high-value renovation projects.

Blocked copy: "Safe lead removal" without Firm Cert # + CR credential. | "We handle old homes safely" without EPA RRP disclosure. | "Lead-safe guaranteed" without testing disclosure. | Any lead-safety claim without: EPA RRP Firm #, Certified Renovator name/credential.

Required substitution: "EPA RRP-Certified Firm [Firm # here] | Certified Renovator [name, CR #] | Pre-renovation testing available on request."

Moat 3: Clark County Permit Gate (BCC 16.04.080 / NRS 278.580)

Rule: Clark County Building Department requires a building permit for all bathroom remodel work involving: moving/adding plumbing (rough-in, drain, supply), electrical work (new circuits, GFCI upgrades, fan installation), structural changes (wall removal/relocation), window replacement. "No permit needed" claims stop home sales at closing when unpermitted work is discovered on title search. NRS 278.580 makes unpermitted work a code violation subject to fines and mandatory demolition.

Blocked copy: "No permit needed — we handle it fast." | "Quick remodel, no paperwork." | "Skip the permit process." | Any implication that permitting is optional for scope involving plumbing, electrical, or structural work.

Required substitution: "All work permit-pulled and inspected. Clark County permit on file — protects your home value at resale."

Moat 4: ADA Scope Accuracy Gate (ADA Title III / Fair Housing Act)

Rule: ADA Title III (28 CFR Part 36) applies to commercial facilities and places of public accommodation only. Residential bathrooms are governed by the Fair Housing Act (FHA), which requires accessibility design features only in new construction of 4+ unit buildings (FHA §3604(f)(3)(C)). Retrofit residential accessibility = voluntary (aging-in-place upgrades). "ADA compliant bathroom" for a single-family home is a misrepresentation of what ADA requires. ANSI A117.1 is the voluntary residential accessibility standard; ADA 2010 Standards are the mandatory commercial standard — they are not interchangeable.

Blocked copy: "ADA compliant bathroom renovation." | "We'll make your bathroom ADA compliant." | "ADA accessible master bath" for residential work.

Required substitution: "Aging-in-place accessibility upgrades (ANSI A117.1 guidelines): grab bars, barrier-free shower entry, comfort-height fixtures — designed for lifetime use."

Moat 5: Mold / Moisture Scope Boundary Gate (IICRC S520 / NRS 624)

Rule: Standard bathroom remodel ≠ mold remediation. When mold is discovered during demolition, IICRC S520 Standard for Mold Remediation defines a separate scope requiring: IICRC AMRT/WRT credentials, containment, air scrubbing, and clearance testing. "We handle any mold we find" without IICRC credentials and a separate remediation contract: (1) voids the remodeler's general liability insurance for remediation work, (2) exposes the contractor to NRS 624 unlicensed work claims if mold remediation is treated as part of the general contract, (3) creates FTC deception liability if mold remediation quality claims are made without qualified credentials.

Blocked copy: "If we find mold during demo, we'll take care of it." | "Full mold removal included." | "We handle mold — no need for a separate company."

Required substitution: "If mold is discovered during demolition, we pause work, document findings, and connect you with a licensed mold remediation specialist before proceeding. Your health and your home's structural integrity come first."

Moat 6: Structural / Load-Bearing Wall Disclosure Gate (NRS 625)

Rule: In Nevada, structural engineering work (wall removal analysis, load path calculations, beam sizing) requires a licensed Professional Engineer (NRS 625.030). Clark County Building Department requires PE-stamped drawings for any work affecting load-bearing walls, beams, or headers. "We can remove any wall to open up your bathroom" without a PE involvement disclosure creates: (1) scope misrepresentation, (2) permit rejection risk, (3) structural liability. "Open concept bathroom" marketing that implies unrestricted wall removal = engineering scope overreach.

Blocked copy: "We can open any wall." | "Remove any wall for your dream bathroom — no problem." | "Structural changes are easy for our crew."

Required substitution: "Wall removal feasibility assessed during consultation. Load-bearing walls require PE-stamped drawings — we coordinate the structural engineering, you get one point of contact." (Only if contractor actually coordinates PE involvement.)

Moat 7: Warranty / FTC / TCPA Gate

Rule: (a) Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act §104: written warranties on goods (tile, fixtures, cabinetry) must clearly disclose scope, duration, what's covered vs. excluded, and who the warrantor is. "Lifetime waterproofing guarantee" without written terms = Magnuson-Moss violation. (b) FTC 16 CFR Part 255 (2023 update): review requests may not incentivize reviews, gate negative reviews, or require positive sentiment. Review request SMS requires PEWC (Prior Express Written Consent, FCC TCPA 47 CFR 64.1200). (c) FTC Act Section 5: "Home value increases $X with a bathroom remodel" requires attribution to a credible, current source (NAR Cost vs. Value Report is acceptable with citation and year). "#1 bathroom remodeler" requires documented substantiation. "100% satisfaction guaranteed" without refund/resolution policy = unfounded claim.

Blocked copy: "Lifetime waterproofing guarantee." (without written scope/terms) | "Your bathroom remodel will add $30,000 to your home value." (without source) | "#1 bathroom remodeler in Henderson" (without ranking documentation) | "100% satisfaction guaranteed." (without resolution terms) | SMS review requests without PEWC.

Required substitution: Use source-attributed ROI claims (NAR CVR 2025: bathroom remodel averages 71.7% cost recoup in the Pacific region). Use conditional satisfaction language with resolution process. Include PEWC-compliant SMS workflow.


4 Prompts

Prompt 1: Seasonal Campaigns & Lead Generation (Free Tier)

Generates: spring remodel season launch campaign (landing page headline/sub, 3 FB/IG ads, Google RSA, 3-email nurture sequence, GBP posts) + winter pre-approval campaign (financing angle) + summer move-in-ready campaign (real estate pre-listing focus). All 7 moats enforced. EPA RRP disclosure required on all pre-1978 targeting.

Prompt 2: Service Pages + JSON-LD Schema

Generates: 6 service pages (master bath remodel, hall bath remodel, walk-in shower conversion, tub-to-shower, accessible/aging-in-place bath, commercial restroom — with NRS 624 license disclosure + permit + EPA RRP note on each) + LocalBusiness + Service JSON-LD schema. No fabricated aggregateRating permitted.

Prompt 3: Reputation Engine & Referral System

Generates: 20 FTC 2023-compliant review requests (8 email, 6 SMS PEWC, 3 door hanger/card, 3 verbal script) + 15 GBP response templates (5-star ×5, scope dispute ×3, timeline concern ×2, permit/inspection question ×2, mold discovery scenario ×1, fake review ×1, ADA question ×1) + 6 B2B referral letters (real estate agent with permit + EPA RRP emphasis, home inspector, interior designer, property manager, insurance adjuster for water-damage rebuild, mortgage lender for renovation loan referral).

Prompt 4: Digital Ads & Local SEO

Generates: 12-item Google LSA eligibility checklist (B-2 license, C-1/C-2 subs, EPA RRP Firm Cert, GL + WC, background checks, permit compliance, BBB, GBP verified) + 5 RSA ad groups (master bath, walk-in shower, aging-in-place, pre-listing, emergency water damage rebuild) + 6 FB/IG ads + 30-day GBP content calendar + 30 keyword clusters (persona-segmented: buyer intent, seller prep, accessibility, financing) + 3 cold outreach sequences (real estate agents, insurance adjusters, property managers).


Target Buyers

  • Licensed B-2 remodeling contractors (sole operator to 10-crew)
  • Design-build firms adding bathroom specialty
  • Kitchen & bath showrooms with installation services
  • Insurance restoration contractors expanding into remodeling
  • Aging-in-place / universal design specialists

Pricing

  • Single skill: $49 one-time | $19.99/month
  • Home Services Trades Bundle v2 (42 skills): $99 one-time

Compliance Disclosure

All outputs are marketing copy templates. Contractor verifies applicable license numbers, permit requirements, and EPA credentials for their jurisdiction before publishing. Not legal advice.