Flower farm marketing that sells the bloom before it opens.
We're Vince and Jenna, a husband-and-wife team. We run the online side of flower farms, the ticketing, ads, email, texts, and social, so more families discover what you've built.
No pitch, no pressure. Just an honest look at where your farm could grow.
We understand how flower farms actually run.
A flower farm runs on a window it cannot control. Tulips give you three or four good weeks in April if the spring cooperates, dahlias and sunflowers stretch the calendar later, and one warm week can move peak bloom faster than your ads can keep up. Most farms wait until the field is open to start selling, which wastes the best weeks of demand. The work is selling tickets before the first petal opens, moving fast when the bloom moves, and making the photos so good the field markets itself next year.
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Sell before the bloom
Tickets go on sale weeks ahead with flexible dates, so your best revenue is locked in before the weather has a vote.
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Move when the flowers move
Bloom-status emails and texts shift the crowd when peak bloom comes early or holds late, so nobody arrives to a field that is already past.
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Let the field do the marketing
Photo packages, golden-hour slots, and u-cut stems turn every visit into pictures that sell next spring for you.
The levers that matter most for flower farms.
- Early ticket sales with flexible dates
- Time-slot TicketSpice entry
- Bloom-status email and SMS updates
- Photo packages and golden-hour slots
- U-cut stem and bouquet bar add-ons
- Local creator and photographer partnerships
Ticketing sits at the center of all of it, and a big part of our job is how we build your TicketSpice ticket page so the checkout feels easy and your numbers are clear.
This is part of how we approach agritourism marketing for every kind of farm, from flower farms to anyone else welcoming families onto their land.
Our season emails average 68% open rates across the farms we run, which is what makes it possible to move a whole weekend's crowd when the bloom shifts by a week.
Every farm and season is different, and results vary. See more on our work page.
Questions flower farms ask us.
When should a flower farm start selling tickets?
Four to six weeks before your expected bloom, with flexible or exchangeable dates so an early or late spring does not turn into a pile of refunds. Selling ahead wins twice, the revenue is locked in, and every buyer is on your list when you need to point them to the real peak.
How do I market a tulip festival?
Treat the bloom window like the product. Announce dates early, sell timed tickets ahead, post field updates as the color comes on, and lean on photographers and local creators whose pictures travel further than ads. Then capture every visitor's email so next April starts with an audience instead of a cold start.
What if the bloom comes early or late?
This is where most flower farms lose money, and where a good list saves you. Flexible ticket dates plus a bloom-status email and text the moment things shift will move most of your crowd to the right week. The farms that handle this well end up with more trust from their guests, not less.
Do flower farms need timed entry?
If you care about the photos, yes. Timed slots keep the rows walkable and the backgrounds clear of crowds, which matters when pictures are the main reason people come. They also smooth out your parking and your checkout line on peak weekends.
Let's talk about your flower farm.
Tell us about your season and where things feel harder than they should. We'll send back a few honest thoughts on where we'd start. Helpful whether or not we ever work together.
Fall farms: we start onboarding for the fall season in early summer, and we only take on a few new farms each year.