Real Estate SEO: Ultimate Guide for Agents – Placester

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Every real estate agent’s dream: quality local leads on autopilot.‍ Fewer cold calls, no more meetings with unqualified prospects, and of course, more revenue. How do you make the dream a reality? The answer: real estate SEO (Search Engine Optimization, i.e. showing up, and standing out on Google when people search for the services you provide). Today, 90% of home buyers use the internet. With so many people searching online for homes, the agents who master real estate SEO and knows how to work with the search engine, win the game in the real estate business.
The best part about real estate SEO? It never rests. It generates leads for you 24/7, without the need to call, buy ads, or pound the pavement. Ready to step off the lead generation hamster wheel? Follow this ultimate real estate agent SEO guide and you’ll not only have a clearer understanding of what it takes to rank in your local market, but a tactical roadmap to make it happen.
Let’s jump in.

While there’s a lot of jargon floating around online, real estate SEO really boils down to:
Showing up in the search engines when people are looking for someone to help them buy or sell a property.
Put yourself in the customer’s shoes for a moment, and imagine you want to buy a new home. You’ve settled on where, and what kind of property — so, what are the first steps?
If you’re like 44% of home buyers, the first thing you do is head straight to Google, open a new tab and start typing
Boom!
You’ve got a shortlist of options to look at. And, there’s a 60% chance you’ll click on one of the top three results to start evaluating:


However, the layout of the SERP (search engine results page) has recently changed. Now ads, instant answers, local map packs have pushed down the once visible organic rankings making it even harder to get noticed online for important search terms:


Because so many businesses are competing for the little organic real estate (no pun intended) left on the SERP, Search Engine Optimization for brokers and agents has become a brutally competitive space.
It’s no longer good enough to create a real estate website and publish quality content. Today, if you want to rank for important keywords that drive qualified leads, you need a proper realtor SEO strategy.

According to the National Association of Realtors, 44% of all buyers search online for property listings as the first stage of their journey.


That’s a massive change in the real estate industry from 1981, when the most-used resource was newspaper ads (by 22% of buyers).
Almost half of buyers start their searches for properties directly. For this large chunk, it’s essential your property listings are optimized for the bordering neighborhoods and other terms that indicate local relevance to Google.
Just check out how much traffic this Madison realtor gets from a few local keywords:


Hundreds of visits every month from searchers looking for homes in the local area — from just a small set of keywords.
Wherever you look, no matter the location, there’s going to be between hundreds and tens of thousands of prospects searching for real estate in that local area every month:
Since ranking in the #1 spot in Google gets you around 36.4% of total clicks…

(Source)

…Then ranking #1 for
But, these keywords don’t represent the mindset of every buyer. Some aren’t ready to pick the property yet — they’re still stalled with legal or financial questions that slow the process down.
That’s why 13% of searchers are just looking for more information. They’re less sure about next steps than those who search things like “condos for sale madison wi”, but they’re still valuable real estate leads to nurture.
By targeting these informational keywords, you can present searchers with helpful content to build brand awareness, and grow your lead list.
Check out this strategy in action by Redfin with their content on purchase and sales agreements:


It ranks for 250 different keywords and brings in around 1,100 organic visits a month.
The post includes a call to action that converts casual readers into real estate leads:


In the past, users primarily depended on personal computers to conduct online searches.
But the emergence of mobile devices transformed how users search online. Data from the last five years shows a clear trend of mobile steadily taking over PCs in the search sphere:

(Source)

The internet has eclipsed every other source of leads, information and sales that came before it.
Now, 93% of buyers 36 years and younger go online as part of the real estate search process — that’s the largest market segment, with 3% more share than baby boomers.
And, even the older demographics are turning to online search in the home buying process:


And if you’re thinking that you can just skip over implementing real estate SEO strategy and focus 100% of your time on paid advertising, keep in mind that paid spend doesn’t convert as well as organic search results. The average conversion rate for Google ads across all industries is 3.75%, but real estate only converts at 2.47%. It appears real estate marketers are having a harder time converting leads into sales through paid advertising.
The market’s wide open and your competitors are leaving a lot of money on the table by ignoring SEO for realtors.
And, it’s time for you to capitalize on the real estate niche.


Now that we have learned the basics of SEO, let’s deepen our knowledge and understand the four types of SEO that will help us create the most efficient content and become real estate SEO experts! 
Basically, On-Page SEO means all the content available on your real estate website for the site visitors to read, both on the main page and the subpages. In order to use this king of Search Engine Optimazation fully, you need to properly fill your website content with real estate seo keywords, adjust navigation on the website and make sure that all the URLs are seo-friendly, i.e they are as short as possible, describe the subpage (for example has the subpage’s title in it). If it includes a keyword, that’s even better.
On-Page SEO is the easier one to manage as most of it is under your control. If any changes are necessary, you can easily update the content and keep it in-line with the latest real estate SEO trends.

Off-Page SEO is based on link-building, which means everything that influences the visibility of your website but cannot be directly changed on the website, i.e. the external content that refers to your website – your social media channels, other websites, external professional blogs that include a link to your website, guest posts, brand mentions  and so on.   
Managing off-site SEO definitely requires more work and attention: it means creating additional content for your social media and establishing cooperation with other creators that could include a link to your website in their content. It is definitely worth the effort, however you have to remember that a) not every link is equal, and b)  it’s not always possible to control everything that is being published on external real estate websites that link to yours, so choose your promoters wisely and make sure that their websites are SEO-friendly, too (they are reputably, trustworthy and not excessively filled with keywords).
Technical SEO is probably the most difficult to manage as it often requires coding knowledge or a specialist’s support. In a nutshell, technical SEO consists of all the technical aspects of your website that have to be adjusted to meet the requirements of the search engine. It might be indexing, crawling, website architecture and navigation, rendering, page speed and security as well as mobile-friendliness. 
It’s good to have seo experts take a look at your website’s technical SEO, however, there are some things that take only a little bit of tech-savviness to better the technical SEO aspects of your website such as a) making sure that the website content is not duplicated (eg. you have the same content on your main page as on your About Us subpage), removing all dead links from your website and checking if all the other links work properly. If possible, take care of your site’s architecture, making sure that it is logical. The flatter the website structure is, the better it will cooperate with the search engines.

Local SEO is the fourth type of SEO and probably the one that will be the most important for real estate seo marketing. Essentially, local SEO optimization means creating content that is relevant to the local users’ queries. If users look for general information such as “how to do something” or historic facts, most likely they will get similar Google search results. However, if they search for “homes for sale”, most likely they will end up with completely different results that depend on their localization. That’s because Google uses our localization to show us the most relevant results.
Continue reading the article to find out how to use Local SEO, On-Page SEO and Off-Page SEO for real estate websites.

Coming up with an effective real estate SEO marketing strategy is easier using dedicated tools that will help you plan and monitor activities. It is also crucial to avoid some of the common mistakes that will negatively affect the website’s rankability in the search engine. 



Yoast is one of the most popular SEO plugins for WordPress, with over 8,000,000 downloads.
It helps you optimize key on-page elements, check content readability, create custom site hierarchies, and manage technical SEO.
Google Search Console provides insight into your search performance, identifies technical SEO issues, gathers link data and checks exactly how Google sees your content:


It has a few reports worth checking regularly, including your organic search performance, 404s, crawl errors, and warnings.
Would you ignore a warning about your site that came directly from Google? Usually, it’s a good idea to follow their best practices, because you’re playing their game.


Lighthouse is the next generation of Google tools that builds on PageSpeed Insights and the Mobile-Friendly Test. It’s a full suite of testing tools built into Google Chrome that gives you insight into both the technical SEO elements of your site on mobile devices, and the usability (loading time, content-blocking scripts, etc.).
The easiest way to use Lighthouse is to install its Chrome extension.


Ubersuggest is an SEO tool from Neil Patel that helps you find keyword ideas and evaluate the level of competition.
If you don’t want to take the plunge and invest in a fully-featured tool like Ahrefs or SEMrush, take Ubersuggest’ free online version for a test drive.


Yext identifies where your business appears on the web (Facebook page, local directories, etc), where it doesn’t, and how you can optimize existing listing information (NAP) to drive more organic traffic.
Remember: You want the business name, phone number and address displayed consistently across the web.
Yext gives you all this information:


Yext has a direct integration with the largest data aggregators. So, you can upload the correct business information and it will push this information out to all the missing directories, and update the existing ones.
This saves you from having to go out and manually create logins and update information across hundreds of different business listings.


Similar to Yext, BrightLocal has connections with thousands of local directories like Yelp, Google Maps, and Facebook.
A valuable use case for the tool is layering on top of Yext. i.e. you can find additional niche and local directories to submit business information to that were not listed in Yext.
It’s a great way to build out a larger citation footprint.

If you’re targeting a group of keywords on a page or blog post, you may feel like you need to load up every sentence or paragraph with those words and phrases. After all, more keywords is better, right?.
Not necessarily. Today’s search engines are very smart, so their algorithms understand synonyms and semantic relationships between words.
With that in mind, there are some common keyword stuffing practices you should avoid:

Instead of trying to play the system, all you need to do is include keywords within the appropriate context in a thoughtful way to make your real estate website show up high in the search results.
Being a real estate agent, it may seem really like a good idea to just create a page with a long list of keywords you’re targeting, then link each item on that list to a page on your site. But, once again, that’s not how humans explore web content. Instead, it’s much better to incorporate internal links throughout the site with thoughtful anchor text that points to a relevant blog post or page on your real estate website.
Unlike the ‘good old days’, when it was easy to get authority and relevance by getting listed on a link farm. Those are so old that any screenshots of them show Windows XP:


Using link directories (farms) and scoring dodgy backlinks is a tactic that was big until Google decided to penalize participating sites by dropping rankings and de-indexing pages. Don’t let it happen to you!
You’ve probably experienced this before: you visit a website that has a bunch of links on it about restaurants in Minneapolis. You click on one about the best Italian restaurants in the city, then find yourself on another page that’s also a list of links.
Frustrating, right?


If your content is meant to educate and inform people, any links on your site should take them directly to that thoughtful, well-written and quality content. Don’t make people go on a wild goose chase to find information that’s important to them to earn SEO links. That is a killer for online real estate lead generation.
While content that overpromises might get a lot of clicks, your time-on-site, pages-per-session, and bounce rate will be awful. Your analytics will show that users clicked, rolled their eyes, then closed the tab.
Google measures your users’ engagement with your content, and takes that kind of behavior to mean that your content is irrelevant, and not worth ranking.


SEMRush’ research proves the correlation between user engagement and search engine ranking.
Yes, that’s right, clickbait is more likely to harm your Google rankings than help them.
We’ve covered this extensively in a previous post, so we can keep it short: never pay for links to your content, and never accept payments for links to other websites' content. Google can spot link buying behavior, and your site will be penalized accordingly.
A quick Google search for this phrase turns up just over 300,000 results, the authors of which are perfectly willing to tell you how you can still get away with some of these shortcuts.
No matter what these so-called “seo experts” say, the shortcuts just aren’t worth the risk. Search engine algorithms know what they are, and penalize people who try to cheat the system.


Yeah, this tactic is old. And not in a ‘tried-and-tested’ kind of way.
If you’re wondering what you can do to improve your SEO without taking shortcuts, there is one tactic that won’t steer you wrong: create interesting, informative, helpful content on your site to help educate and entice potential customers. This will not only build a solid foundation for strategic link building, but also help make your brand a trustworthy source for real estate expertise.
Another no-no for your real estate SEO is publishing the same content on multiple pages of your site.


While short, commonly-used phrases are more than okay to leverage across your site (i.e. your primary, secondary, and long-tail keywords), you want to be careful not to take large chunks of content and post them on separate pages.
In the words of Google:
“when large portions of the website are copied across both of these sites then we assume that actually the whole website is kind of a copy of another and we try to help you by just picking one”
What that means is that you can only rank once for a piece of content — you can’t duplicate it, re-optimize it, and hope to get another round of value from that same piece.
Google is smarter than … well … just about everyone (including and especially these would-be deceivers) and, at the end of the day, always identifies which brands implement this lead generation “strategy.”
There are some instances in which duplicate content isn’t bad (or as bad) for your site, but it’s best to just steer clear of adding identical content on your site altogether to eliminate the risk potential.
While it can be worth your dime and time to employ a contractor to aid in the execution of a broader SEO strategy, it’s likely not in your best interest to have them create content for you.
The reason is simple: You know your real estate market like the back of your hand and can write about it in-depth. Outsourced writers can only research your local area, market and industry, and offer basic knowledge.
If you already rank well in search engine results and just want to get more evergreen, how-to content on the buying and selling process for your audience, then by all means, hire a content marketing agency to assist.
But if you, like any other real estate agent out there, still need help getting on page one of the search results for hyper-local topics, produce your own local seo based content or assign a team member to contribute.


We’ll handle this.
During a real estate website redesign, you should take the potential SEO ramifications of such a move into account. Making wholesale or even partial changes to your site can impact all of the search engine optimization work you’ve done to date, so this process needs to be handled with great care and attention to detail.
One of the core maintenance tasks to focus on first and foremost when altering your site or getting an entirely new one in place is to create a new sitemap — that is, which navigational links lead to which pages.
Once you know how you’ll transfer over your old content into your new or redesigned site, set up 301 redirects. These will ensure anyone who clicks on the old link/URL for your existing content from the previous site will be taken to the new page.


301 redirects will help you preserve all the SEO value you’ve obtained for your web presence and prevent any issues with pages that currently rank well in SERPs. When done poorly, it can send users to broken pages and hurt rankings.
While working on the redisgn, don't forget about the mobile device users!
More than one-third of full-time marketers cite visuals as the most important element of their content marketing efforts.


That should tell you just how important it is to not just publish copy that explains various buying and selling concepts and offers unique, local-market insights, but also to post images, graphics, videos, and other visual collateral.
Infographics can be a powerful, engaging strategy that allow you to create content that’s relatable and informative:


You can also embed video presentations and property tours:


By doing so, you not only make it easy for your real estate website visitors to consume your content, but you also enhance the odds visitors will stick around on pages longer and click through to more quality content.

(Source)
At the end of the day, SEO is just one important component of a marketing strategy.
Frustratingly for many, it can take time for content to rank. The average #1 ranked page for a keyword is 3 years old, and only around a fifth of content on page one is a year old:


Think of this another way: once you hit #1, you’re going to generate leads for years to come.
Because generating leads through SEO is a “long term play”, it shouldn’t be your only focus. Luckily, there are numerous other tactics worth your attention.
Consistently posting a variety of your search-friendly blog posts and landing pages to social media, sharing the same links in your drip email marketing campaigns, and syndicating your content on other blogs and publications are just a few other distinct marketing tactics to employ on top of your real estate SEO efforts that can expand your brand awareness and help you get traffic.

Read on to discover how you can use the three types of SEO strategy to capture more traffic (and leads) for your business.

It is critical for local businesses to get listed in Google’s 3-pack.
When potential customers search for a local business or service provider (eg: realtor in san antonio), they’ll likely see a map pack featuring different Google My Business pages:


Taking up half the screen space, users pay more attention to search results that feature snapshots, ratings, reviews, and Google Maps directions.
Here’s how to set it up.
First, go to google.com/business. Once logged in, start filling out the information:


Make sure the profile is 100% complete and up-to-date:
Make sure your NAP+W (Name, address, phone number, and website) are complete and consistently formatted across the web.


Google ranks a maximum of three businesses for local searches like “real estate agent near me”, and it favors businesses with complete information. A formatted phone number that uses dashes and parentheses enables one-click calling from right inside the Google map results:
(Source)

Finally, make sure to use schema markup to make Google aware of important information. Google recognizes certain schema elements, like phone and address, and uses that to check its own Google My Business information for accuracy.
An example of schema markup for an address, in raw HTML, looks like this:


And here is what it would look like for a local furniture store inside Google’s Structured Data Testing tool:

(Source)


If this all looks like nonsense, it’s probably best to get a more technical team member to properly mark up your website’s structured data.
Citations are one of the core local search ranking factors:

(Source)

Despite the importance of having up-to-date citations – Name, Address, Phone Number and Website (NAP) – across industry directories and local publications, ConstantContact found over 50% of local businesses have inaccurate contact information across those sites.
This is one of the first steps any local business should take to improve rankings in the map pack.
The local search ecosystem can look like a complicated web of sites, directories and social platforms:


You could go to each one and list your business individually, but let’s be real, few of us have the time for that.
Instead, use a tool like Yext to push your listing out to all major directories and big four aggregate sites – Factual, Acxiom, Localeze, and Expressupdate.
This will save you a TON of time, and do most of the heavy lifting for you.
Important: make sure the information you submit is 100% accurate and matches the NAP listed on your real estate website. Google will use this information to validate its own data.
Schema markup is a way to structure your site’s code so that it indicates to Google what kind of format it takes. For example, you might have a table that describes a property, which has fields for the property’s price, bedrooms, etc.
Using schema markup, you could make that table ‘friendlier’ to Google, and more likely to be featured in Google’s eye-catching rich snippets or instant answers.
Studies show that pages that use schema markup get a 20-25% higher click-through rate in search.
So, how do you implement it? There are two main things to mark up as a realtor. The first is your business’ listing which includes opening hours, contact details, and more.
The Schema project even has an entry that exactly describes a real estate agency here:


Second, mark up the properties themselves.
Trulia uses the Product schema markup for listing its properties, including the following fields:
According to Search Engine Watch, 90% of consumers read reviews before visiting a business and 72% of consumers will take action only after reading a positive review.
Online reviews not only help establish trust (critical for conversions), but are now a heavily weighted local ranking factor:

(Source)

Reviews are a great way to improve your SEO and help yourself stand out in the sea of real estate agents marketing themselves online:


If you have a lot of happy customers, make sure you are actively asking for reviews on Google, Yelp, facebook and other important third party review sites.
Keyword research may be the most overlooked aspect of SEO. It’s crucial to understanding consumer intent.
While most real estate marketers will happily spend countless hours on their social media strategy and content marketing, very few spend the time needed to learn how to actually do effective keyword research.
What’s crazy is that keywords largely determine which potential customers find you via search. Consider it potentially free traffic if done correctly.
In addition, the right keywords will ensure that your content marketing efforts aren’t wasted attracting the wrong customer or, worse, no customer at all. Remember, including your location in your keywords is a great way to make sure you reach customers specifically interested in the market you serve.
Use these quick tips to get the ball rolling:
Use the Google search bar for long-tail keywords:

This will return a list of additional queries users are typing directly into the Google search bar.
Check your search queries in Google Ads:

Set up Google Ads to unlock its keyword search functionality. (Setting up Google Ads does not mean you need to spend any money.) This report will show you all the queries triggering ad impressions. This is a great place to look for valuable keyword opportunities.
Check the organic terms you rank for in Google Analytics:

Test out Ahrefs’ keyword explorer:
You can also use a tool like the Ahrefs Site Explorer to quickly identify which keywords are driving traffic to your top search competitors:


Keywords can generally be divided into two categories:

Head keywords are usually short, broad and very competitive. Like the keyword realtor or real estate. If you’re hoping to rank on page 1 of Google for terms like this, you’ll need to beat a ton of established, high-authority sites. As a business only just getting into gear with SEO, that’s not very likely.
Traffic to head keywords accounts for around 18% of total searches, and is generally not very high-converting. What that means is people searching real estate don’t have a very high intent to buy — they could be looking for news, a definition, a Wikipedia article or any number of things.
They’re probably not looking for something specific, like a commercial realtor in Maine with a warehouse for sale.
…But some prospects are!
That’s where long tail keyword optimization comes in.
Around 70% of Google searches are for long tail keywords. These are keywords like buy a 3 bed home in Minnesota or lake house summer rental poconos.
Typically, the more long tail the keyword, the higher intent. And, high intent keywords convert better:


Here’s an example of this strategy in action — check out how a small local business is ranking ahead of Zillow because of smart long tail optimization:


The page ranks for over 700 different long-tail keywords! As you’d expect, each keyword has low monthly search volume, but considering that it totals 1,300 visits per month, it’s worth going after a diverse set of long tail keywords versus fighting in a competitive space.

On-site SEO for local real estate requires some slightly different tactics than national SEO.
First, you want to make sure your business NAP (name, address, and phone number) is used throughout your real estate website and that it’s the same NAP that you used for your local listing and citations (discussed above).
You want to use state, city, and town names in title tags, meta descriptions, and body copy.
Choose a website platform that makes use of Schema local markup — this acts as a homing beacon for the search engines, letting Google, Bing, and Yahoo indexing bots know what they are looking at.
And specifically for real estate business, you want to make sure all of your real estate listings are indexable and have an XML sitemap. Without it, you can’t take advantage of the incredible SEO value of real estate listings.




Bonus resource: If you want to learn how to optimize all the major on-site elements, check out this 19-step on-page SEO checklist.
The real estate industry has a reputation of producing some fairly lame content which is why there aren’t a ton of examples of beautiful inspiring content marketing in our industry. But, it doesn’t have to be that way.
Creating awesome content that educates, informs, and engages consumers through the entire customer life cycle will be a requirement for any business looking to survive the decades to come. Consumers are in the driver’s seat and have grown to expect value-added experiences.
Here’s a resource of content ideas to get you inspired:

101 Amazing Blog Post Ideas For Your Real Estate Website

You should also consider looking at what some of your competitors are doing in the space. It can be a source of inspiration and give you insight into what types of content is resonating with similar audiences. One of my favorite free tools is BuzzSumo.
I chose Bill Gassett of MaxRealEstateExposure who creates fantastic content. He may be the first to tell you that his site could be prettier, but look at his content: people read it and share it.

This article ranks for home for sale by owner, an insanely competitive keyword, with helpful informational content. Here’s its traffic metrics in Ahrefs:


With this one piece of content, Bill ranks for over 1,300 keywords and brings in 2,500 organic visits a month — a traffic value of over $10,000.
Here are the results after running Bill’s site through Buzzsumo:


In the Content Research report we can see the articles that generated the most social engagement across each of the different networks.
For example:
Bill’s article titled “Buying a Home at Auction” What You Need to Know” is a popular topic with 1,300 shares.
Similarly, the article on “How to Sell a House After a Relative Dies” is another topic you might consider adding to your content pipeline.
The great thing about this report is it surfaces topics that get a lot of social engagement, and also have the potential to drive good top funnel traffic.
Let’s look at another example.
Zillow crushes it with realtor SEO. According to Ahrefs, the site ranks for 11 million different keywords and hauls in almost 44 million organic visitors a month:


While a lot of the traffic comes from high ranking listing and category pages, their blog also brings in a healthy stream of traffic:
Check out this piece of content on the homes that feature in Breaking Bad:


Zillow has the homes listed, connecting the top-funnel content to several listings and area searches. (This is a consistent strategy across the Zillow blog, with other roundups of weird and remarkable properties like this.)
Remember: You never have to reinvent the wheel — especially when other businesses have already drawn up the blueprints. Just check the top content for any competing publication or agency blog, and you’ll instantly see what resonates:


If you want to see content examples that we created to engage agents and brokers, take a look at this Real Estate Marketing Ideas Slideshare that we created in advance of the last Inman Conference in San Francisco.


Real Estate Marketing Secrets From The Pros from Placester
There were four core elements that made this piece a success:
Real Estate Marketing Secrets From The Pros from Placester
There’s nothing worse than an uninspired copy. We’ve all experienced it: the email title that doesn’t deserve a click, the book covers that don’t catch our eye, or the pickup lines that make you want to cringe. For marketers, it’s even more dire.
You spend countless hours creating awesome content and add a title as an afterthought. This is killing your click (and conversion rates) because even if 8 out of 10 people read your headline, only 2 out of 10 will read the rest of your post. Talk about a waste of effort. But it doesn’t have to be like that.
Here’s a helpful headline formula from our friends at CopyBlogger.


Start with something like “Selling Your Home in a Day” and apply the formula from above. You end up with “How to Effortlessly Sell Your Home in Less Than 24 Hours.”
You could also try some other simple formulas:

If you’re not using video content to market your agency and properties, you’re losing out to someone who is:
Aberdeen Group research reports that video marketers get 66% more qualified leads per year, and a 54% boost in brand awareness compared to those that don’t use video.
In the real estate space, the figures are even more stunning.
According to BoldContent, real estate listings with video recieve 403% more inquiries than those without. Despite this, only 2-9% of realtors leverage video marketing.
Huge opportunity!


Ready to level up your real estate video game? Check out this list of the best real estate videos.
According to a study, 78% of websites’ on-page issues stem from one source: images.
Adding listing, neighborhood photos and stock images to your site may seem like a simple task, but there’s actually a lot that goes into optimizing them appropriately.

[Marketing academy secrets the importance of seo for images]
When you create a new webpage or blog post, chances are you add images to them, right? Then you’ve likely noticed there are fields that need to be filled out when publishing these images: alt text, caption, title, and description. Each one needs to include content that explains exactly what the picture or graphic entails — preferably by using one or more keywords intended for the page or post in question.


For instance, if you publish a blog article on a film festival taking place in your market and decide to add an image of the local theater where it will take place, it’s best to include relevant terms and phrases associated with the event in the meta description for that image.


If filling in these descriptions is all it takes to ensure your site gets 37% more clicks from Google Images, don’t you think it’s worth spending a few minutes to do before publishing content?
According to NAR, 89% of new home shoppers use a mobile search engine at the onset and throughout their research.
For almost half of these shoppers, mobile search is the first step:


Google have signaled the shift toward mobile-first indexing – they are going to start using the mobile view to determine both mobile and desktop rankings:
“Mobile-first indexing means that we’ll use the mobile version of the page for indexing and ranking, to better help our – primarily mobile – users find what they’re looking for. […] we continue to encourage webmasters to make their content mobile-friendly”
As usual, you’re playing Google’s game here. The good news is that they don’t hide the rules.
Run your site through the Mobile-Friendly Test tools. You want to see this message:


But, if you run into any issues forward them to the technical resource on your team:


Google does not like slow sites.
Think about it: if you’re curating a list of the best resources, would you be inclined to include one that took forever to load?
Google measures page speed as a ranking factor, but it also looks at how users interact with your site. According to Google, any page that takes over 3 seconds to load loses 53% of visitors who leave before the page is fully loaded.
With mobile becoming more prominent — and 48% of real estate search being initiated from a mobile device — it’s no secret that Google will strongly favor fast-loading sites when delivering mobile results.
Outside of rankings, SOASTA found that a one second delay in page speed can reduce conversions by up to 27%:


You can tune up your site’s speed using recommendations from Google’s PageSpeed Insights and Lighthouse tools:


The tool is free, and provides actionable recommendations on how to increase your site load speed.
In the famous words of Peter Drucker:

(Source)

This same applies to seo real estate marketing: If you don’t measure the performance of your online marketing, you can’t improve it.
If you don’t already have a Google Analytics account set up to monitor digital marketing campaigns, make it a top priority.


Once Google Analytics is running, create a recurring calendar event to check up on the website’s stats — the key metrics that can tell you whether your marketing efforts are doing well or whether they need some fine-tuning (or even complete overhaul or elimination).
Some important KPIs to track in your Google Analytics dashboard include:
Before you can start measuring conversions, you first need to set up a goal:


With the goal set, you can track organic keyword conversions by setting up a custom report.
Bonus resource: For a comprehensive resource on how to set up Google Analytics, check out this guide.

In the sketch above, Moz demonstrates the ideal internal linking structure: each page links to multiple relevant pages, and no two pages are more than three ‘hops’ apart.
This helps you group your site’s resources together and provide a clear, logical path for the user. By doing that, you make it more likely they’ll stay on your site and go down the rabbit hole.
Think how Wikipedia uses its internal links so reliably that you can always find your way through a whole topic, from the category portals to its notable events.
Internal linking isn’t just good for user experience, it’s good for SEO. By linking to your newly published blog posts from older posts that already rank, you pass the ranked page’s authority to the new page and make it more immediately discoverable by Google:

(Source)

Make sure neighborhood pages are pointing to each other with relevant links when you talk about surrounding areas:


Check that you’re referring back to old content in your blog and pointing readers to other useful resources:


Also – make a habit of updating old posts when you publish a new relevant one, to keep your old pages fresh and your new content more easily indexable.
If you’ve messed around with your site’s URL structure in the past, chances are you’ve broken some internal links — this can hurt the user experience and have a negative impact on SEO for realtors.
You can use the free version of Screaming Frog SEO Spider to check for broken links on a site:


Download the tool, and enter your site’s URL into the crawl box and hit “Run”. Watch as your site’s links are crawled and check the 4xx errors filter; these pages are unreachable for users.
Google Search Console is another tool that can help you find broken links. Once it’s set up, it can be configured to notify you when it finds 4xx errors on your site.
Sitemaps are files where you provide information about pages, posts, videos and other content on your site. Google and other search engines use sitemaps to identify the most important content and more efficiently crawl your real estate website.


Don’t have a sitemap? You can generate one with Screaming Frog, WordPress, Yoast, or using a free online tool like this.
Once your sitemap has been generated, submit it to Google Search Console:

There’s a limit to how much you can optimize a site’s keyword phrases, internal link structure, and technical SEO. Off-site SEO is the second pillar you need to optimize.
For real estate,that means working to build local citations, backlinks, and reviews on popular platforms.
You don’t need thousands of backlinks to move the needle:


All of these pages rank for keyword phrases that relate to lake properties in Minnesota — they each get hundreds of organic visits a month.
In general, the content with the most (quality) backlinks has the highest rankings and traffic:


Over 90% of pages that exist on the internet get zero organic traffic. So, when it comes to ranking for high-traffic keywords, backlinks need to be factored into the off-site pillar of your real estate SEO strategy:

(Source)

You might be asking: How can I build links back to my real estate content?
There are a lot of ways to build backlinks to your real estate website, but one of the fastest ways to get started is to see how your top ranking competitors are building links to their content.
Enter a competitor’s domain or URL into the Ahrefs Site Explorer and you’ll be able to see all the site linking to the different pages on their website:


Are your competitor’s getting lots of directory links? Any links from other local businesses or news sites? How are they getting the links – sponsoring events, donations, press coverage, blog content?
Find out what content types and strategies are earning the most links for top ranking competitors, and replicate it. This is the fastest way to kickstart a successful link building campaign.
Note: Link building does require a lot of resources to execute properly. In general, we recommend getting the help of an experienced seo agency to help with this effort.
If you’d prefer to tackle it on your own, check out this comprehensive guide on competitor backlink analysis.
Did you know 91% of people read reviews online, and 84% trust them as much as they do their friends?
The stats about Yelp directly help back this up:

(Source)

Yelp not only helps seal the conversion, but it can also be used as a vehicle to get on page 1 of Google for local keywords.
The site already has a ton of authority with Google, that’s why it ranks for a lot of local intent keywords like “real estate agents rapid city sd”.
And check out what happens then if you can get just a couple of Yelp reviews in your local area:


How do you get Yelp reviews? The same way you get most things: just ask.
83% of consumers are willing to refer you after having a positive experience, but only 29% of businesses ask for the referral.
You do have a Facebook page for your business, right?
Even a casual search for real estate businesses in your local area will reveal that Facebook pages show up highly, and come with eye-catching display features like star ratings:


This encourages users to trust you because of the social proof that surrounds your brand: people leave online reviews, like your page, and comment on your content.
To get your Facebook page rank higher, and use its selling power to generate leads, make sure to optimize it to include your real estate website, contact information, and keywords you want to rank for:



Ahrefs


The Ahrefs blog is the original source for many of the industry’s insights, facts, and studies.
With the internet’s richest database of SEO information (apart from maybe Google itself), Ahrefs is uniquely situated to provide thorough, eye-opening original research. Check out these awesome studies to get started:

Moz


Moz has one of the most authoritative SEO blogs online, and is filled with practical tutorials and case studies covering a range of topics – technical, on-page and off-site.

Rand Fishkin’s Whiteboard Friday weekly video series is a must-watch. Here are some examples:

Note: If you’re completely new to the topic of SEO, check out the Moz Beginner’s Guide to SEO.

Search Engine Land


Search Engine Land is a leading industry publication that provides information on the latest algorithm updates, studies and trends in search marketing.
Recommended additions to your daily reading list include the SEO section’s latest news, and its various newsletters.
Bonus resource: Hungry to learn more? Ahrefs put together a list of the top SEO resources (as voted by industry peers).

There you have it – arguably the most in-depth SEO guide for real estate agents you’ll find anywhere online.
We’ve taken a deep dive into the reasons why agents need to be thinking about real estate SEO, looked at specific SEO tactics, identified mistakes you need to avoid, and looked at several tools and resources to help you get faster results through search engines.
Now it’s time to act and there’s no time to lose! Even if you are planning to browse the best seo companies for real estate to manage your online marketing or start a cooperation with a seo real estate consultant in the future, there are some things that you can do right at this moment. We have prepared a list of real estate seo keywords for real estate that will help you improve your real estate website’s visibility immediately.

Efficient SEO for real estate websites will definitely include focusing on location and answering your public’s questions. If you are a broker and work with agents across the country, take this fact into consideration while planning your strategy. See our examples of the easiest and the best real estate seo on page that make the website rank higher!

Homes for sale in "state"
Homes for sale in texas

Focus on the whole knowledge that your client has to have before he would buy a house.
like this for “Homes for sale in NJ” topic:
 
Focus on queries not that much for keywords, use people also ask section to create articles:
If you choose your keywords, analize Google and see what people were looking for using that keyword / query.
Another example of keywords for real estate agents:

Create a subpage for every city

What strategies and/or tools are you going to incorporate in your business?
Let us know in the comments below.

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Call us at 800-728-8391 for more details or simply leave your phone number, and we’ll reach out to you!
Don’t miss out on the latest tips, tools, and tactics at the forefront of agent success.

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