Where to find a trusted, SEO strategist for real estate company web site?
-
I addition to running a small web development company and thus having some background to SEO/inbound marketing, I also own a real estate web site at www.nhfinehomes.com. Last year, I had the site recoded with many SEO improvements in mind. The result was a significant boost in traffic/leads and more pages being indexed. One of the challenge with real estate sites is that all my competitors have the same content (house listings) via the IDX feed so the challenge is to try to shape the pages to be a little different.
My question is where do I go from here? I'm not sure where to best focus my efforts for maximum improvement. My biggest competitor has tons more links, some of which are just not realistic for a small firm like mine. Is content creation the next step to push out on a Wordpress blog with better internal linking? In Google Analytics, I see tons of keyword phrases that I have low rankings for and wonder if some optimized content could help boost those?
What I would like to find is a TRUSTED, proven consultant with PROVEN real estate SEO experience that could take a look at my site, my competition and honestly tell me what it would take to improve so I can better determine how big a nut this is to crack. I am okay with doing most of the work and have my programmer who can help with some of the technical. I just don't want to take stabs in the dark and waste resources on ineffective or worst, potentially damaging results.
So anyone here know where I can find such a strategist?
Link
-
Can anyone recommend or offer to assist me with this project? I'm understand the model Darin has proposed and would like to find that 30,000 ft specialist who can review my site, analytics, Google Webmaster and offer a priority list for any on page changes and then get a proven link building specialist involved. Makes sense to me but still would like a more experienced SEO driving the charge vs. me guessing what to do next.
Link
-
Thanks Darin. I would be grateful for any back link resources you are willing to share. Yes, the site does rank on the first page for several key terms. Looking at my analytics I can see where the traffic comes from. I am hoping to find an SEO strategist with my know how than me to look at my site, the links, the competition, the rankings and offer advice on where I could work to improve first. Is it back links, content, internal linking, social media, etc? My #1 competitor did everything right about six years ago and has become the fastest growing NH real estate company solely because of the traffic and leads from their organic rankings in Google. I realize it isn't realistic to think I could 'beat' them but I want to know what it would take to increase my traffic to the next level. I know how much of an influx you get when you work up the ranks collectively.
-
Your site ranks pretty well and you are in the Google knowledge graph too. I show you as #7 for "homes in New Hampshire".
I like to hire multiple SEOs for this kind of work:
A Technical Specialist (on-page) you can pay them some decent money
An off-page specialist (backlinks) you can pay them much less. (oDesk, Elance, etc)
Here is what I would do for the backlinks, you can go to oDesk and get guys for 3.33/ an hour for backlinks, give a few guys 10 hours a week for two weeks and see how they do. Give them a doc to put the links into so you can check them out. Pick the one or two that do a really good job and have the disburse new links to multiple pages on your site.
For the technical specialist, I would recommend not necessarily picking someone in the top of Google as a measurement of how good they are. Google "seo" and you'll see that seomoz isn't on the first page (except for video) and I can tell you they have some of the best tools.
Anyway, you can find some good technical specialist on oDesk too. You'll pay them anywhere between $15/hour and $25/hour or so (They won't need as much time per week as a back link guy so the money won't be too pricey). If you find a few, like we mentioned before, send us their profiles and we'll look them over. I can recommend a few back link guys who are excellent.
-
Thanks guys. I did look into some of the 'real estate seo' options on the first page. Several looked like they offered tall promises but we'll see how they reply. I can understand both sides of the equation (client vs. SEO) but as the client, many of these SEO's seem to want BIG, BIG bucks upfront and expect the client to take all the risk with no proof that they can deliver. I have tried the eLance, Odesk options in the past and not had the best luck. I am protective of my current rankings and know what can happen when a hack SEO is turned loose. While some past experience with the real estate vertical would surely help, I don't think it's required if an SEO is honest, has a vested interest to assist their client and knows their stuff.
-
Marcus Miller has some really good points. The long tail is a great place to start and will help your overall strategy.
Here is a video by Rand on some questions to ask an SEO when you are looking to hire them.
Here is a post by Rand on the same topic. At the bottom of the post it has the answers to the questions.
Beyond that, I personally am a stickler for reporting. If they are building back links it needs to be in doc so I can monitor the quality of them. (You don't have to do this forever but especially when they first start) If they have SEOmoz (or other tools) you need to have that report sent to you so you can see the progress of them. If they've done other sites for real estate then you should ask to see them (I sign non disclosure agreements with my companies so some won't be able to show you all of their work)
Like Marcus said, if you find someone we'll check their work out for you to give you some guidance. Key is to be patient and find a good fit for you.
-
Hey Link
I have come across the IDX feed previously and it is a tricky one as you are by default working with content that is already listed on many other sites.
I did a quick google and found a few 'real estate seo' consultants so it may be worth checking these guys out first as they will know your industry and may have a head start on any other consultant who is looking at it from a general perspective. If there are verticals and places you should be listed, not to say any other SEO would not find them, but these guys should have the inside scoop so I would look at that first.
How to tell if they are any good? Well, see what other work they have done. See who they work for, check the links out to the sites they have promoted and see if you can find anything fishy. Heck, post a few candidates up on here and I am sure people will feed back and you may even find they have an SEOMoz account (which would be a good sign).
If you have big competition, a long tail content strategy can be rewarding long term and if you can own the long tail, that can work well and all feeds into owning the bigger terms over time.
Great name by the way, really, you should consider becoming a full time SEO with that name!
Cheers
Marcus
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Seo for my medium.com site
I have my regular site blog at www.Guideyourhealth.org and a blog on www.medium.com, should I try to get back links for my medium articles as well that are on topics not competing with my site?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | BuyKratomPowderInfo0 -
Query based site; duplicate content; seo juice flow.
Hi guys, We're planning on starting a Saas based service where we'll be selling different skins. Let's say WordPress themes, though it's not about that. Say we have an url called site.com/ and we would like to direct all seo juice to the mother landing page /best-wp-themes/ but then have that juice flow towards our additional pages: /best-wp-themes/?id=Mozify
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | andy.bigbangthemes
/best-wp-themes/?id=Fiximoz /best-wp-themes/?id=Mozicom Challenges: 1. our content would be formatted like this:
a. Same content - features b. Same content - price c. Different content - each theme will have its own set of features / design specs. d. Same content - testimonials. How would be go about not being penalised by SE's for the duplicate content, but still have the /?id=whatever pages be indexed with proper content? 2. How do we go about making sure SEO juice flows to the /?id pages too?Basically it's the same thing with different skins. Thanks for the help!0 -
Any Angular2 SEOs?
We are having a few issues with blog integration into an Angular2 website and would love an SEO referral. Thanks
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | vinadvisor0 -
Moving multiple Sites to One Site and SEO Impact/Ideas
Hi there, We are in the process of moving 2 sites with higher page authority to another site we own (that is our company brand), so essentially 3 sites into one. We're at risk of losing a lot of SEO from the original 2 sites that have all the product information. We are doing this since we merged companies a couple years back and need one web precense. Anyhow, the site launch date is in 3 months and the recommendation is to start moving content over prior to that for top pages, which is a big undertaking when we are launching all the pages again with new content, redeisgn and moving sites in 3 months. If it's the right move, we should do it, but I just wanted to get opinions on how others have handled something similiar when moving to a site with lower site authority and trying not to lose rankings.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | lauramrobinson320 -
Looking for Adult SEO company
Hi guys and girls, I am looking for a company that is willing to work with us to improve our SEO. Our website is www.reallovesexdolls.com and we keep on going all the way UP to fall rock bottom hard again (like waves in the ocean). It's really weird, we never invested much in link building and such. We are so busy with other things that it would be nice to outsource this task. You can contact us by phone, or by email. Thanks!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | MartinePeters0 -
SEO Consult?
Is there anyone here that I can pay to give me a deep analysis of my website and my competitors with recommendation on what to do? I am a small business and I cannot afford expensive monthly SEO fees. I can probably afford a one time consult fee, then I can do the work myself. Or maybe I can pay a-la cart for some of the fixes. I understand this may not be something SEOs want to do since they make their money off doing the work and may not want to share trade secrets. I just thought I would throw that question out there. I've been working on trying to SEO my site for a year now... I was improving and happy with my progress until October and lost 30 positions over my tracked keywords. I have no idea why. I'm kind of at my wits end! 😞
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | CalicoKitty20000 -
Copying contents from a blog site (External) to a company blogsite (internal)
Hi, I have a client that has several external blogs www.blogsite1.info www.blogsite2.info and he also has the www.companywebsite.com the main domain of course is the comapnywebsite.com. They are doing some thing wrong, because instead of generating contents inside the main domain, the create contents in the blogsites and send links to the blogsites to see those contents. So they are inviting their users to EXIT the website... So, I told him, If you want to generate contents, please keep a blog INSIDE your domain www.companywebsite.com/blog, but keep the other ones, cause they are generating links (they are .info domains, that is not good, but they are nice keyword match domains) Now, he told me he was thinking on copy and paste the contents from the external blogsites to the internal website. I warned him about generating duplicate content. But.... is it really a problem? They are not in the same domain... Could google give a penalty because of that to the main domain? Thanks!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | teconsite0 -
Site #2 beats site #1 in every aspect?
Hey guys, loving SEOMoz so far and will definitely continue my subscription after the free trial. I have a question however, which I am really confused about. When researching my primary keyword, I have found that the second ranked site beats the top site in every single aspect, apart from domain age, which is almost 6 years for the top one and 6 months for the second. When I say every single aspect, I mean everything. More authority for the page and domain, more links, more anchor text links, more authoritive links, more social signals, more relevant links, better domain (although second ranked site is a .net), better MozRank, better MozTrust etc.... I have noticed though, that in the UK SERPs, those sites are switched, so #2 is actually #1. Could it be that the US SERPs just haven't updated yet, or am I missing something completely different.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | darrenspeed1