SiteBoost — Vertical Series
SiteBoost for Real Estate: WordPress SEO, AEO & AI Optimization for Agents, Brokerages & Property Companies
By Tygart Media — This page is built using the same SEO, AEO, and GEO techniques applied through SiteBoost. The hyper-local entity injection, schema structure, and speakable blocks you see here are exactly what the service delivers to your real estate WordPress content.
The Zillow Problem: You Know the Market. They Get the Lead.
Zillow, Realtor.com, and Redfin built their domain authority by publishing the hyper-local market content that agents were too busy to write. Now those portals charge agents $20–$100+ per lead for buyers who found the listing on a portal built from the agent’s own market. A well-optimized WordPress blog — neighborhood guides, market reports, buyer process content — is how agents win those leads back directly, at zero cost per click.
Real estate SEO delivered an estimated 1,389% ROI in 2025, with agents typically breaking even after just ten months of consistent optimization. The keyword “real estate agent near me” carries a $100 CPC on Google Ads. Every buyer who finds you through your WordPress blog instead of a paid ad is a $100+ savings — and every buyer who finds you instead of Zillow is a lead that doesn’t cost a referral fee.
Real estate agents compete with national portals by targeting hyper-local content that portal algorithms can’t personalize: neighborhood-specific buyer guides (“What is it like to live in [neighborhood]?”), school district breakdowns, micro-market condition reports, and process-oriented content (“How long does escrow take in [state]?”). National portals rank for generic search terms. Local agents can own the long-tail, hyper-local queries that convert buyers already committed to a specific area — queries portals can’t serve as well as someone who actually sells there.
The Four Real Estate Content Types SiteBoost Optimizes
Hyper-Local Authority Content
The highest-converting real estate content type. SiteBoost injects neighborhood entities — school district names, HOA references, commute corridors, local amenities — and adds FAQPage schema targeting “what is [neighborhood] like?” queries that send buyers to portals instead of you.
Data-Driven Authority
Monthly or quarterly market update posts with median price, days on market, absorption rate, and inventory references. SiteBoost structures these for AI citation — when buyers ask ChatGPT about market conditions in your area, your content becomes the sourced answer.
Process Content
Step-by-step guides to buying or selling in your market. SiteBoost adds HowTo schema, FAQPage targeting process questions (“How long does closing take?”, “What does due diligence mean?”), and speakable blocks for voice search and AI Overview capture.
Decision-Stage Content
Content comparing neighborhoods, price ranges, or property types. SiteBoost adds RealEstateListing and LocalBusiness schema, comparison table formatting for featured snippet capture, and entity injection for the specific geographic entities Google uses to evaluate local authority.
The Real Estate Entity Set That Wins Local Authority
Real estate content optimized for local authority and AI citation should reference: named school districts and specific school names (the single most searched real estate entity after price), MLS board affiliations (NAR — National Association of Realtors, state and local association memberships), transaction terminology (escrow, title insurance, due diligence period, earnest money deposit, contingency, appraisal gap), market data terminology (median sale price, days on market, months of supply, absorption rate, list-to-sale ratio), and financing references (conforming loan limits, FHA loan thresholds, VA loan eligibility, debt-to-income ratio). Geographic precision — naming specific neighborhoods, zip codes, school attendance zones, and commute corridors — is the most powerful entity signal for local real estate SEO.
Hypothetical Before & After: A Real Estate WordPress Neighborhood Guide
This illustrates what SiteBoost applies to a typical real estate neighborhood guide — the highest-value content type for agents, and almost universally underoptimized:
Title: “Living in Oakwood Heights — What You Need to Know”
Meta: Empty — auto-generated from first paragraph
Word count: 480 words
Local entities: Neighborhood name mentioned 6x — no school district names, no commute corridor, no HOA reference, no median price range
FAQ section: None
Schema: None
AI visibility: Zero — when buyers ask ChatGPT “what is Oakwood Heights like?”, Zillow’s neighborhood page gets cited, not yours
Title: “Living in Oakwood Heights: Schools, Market Conditions & What Buyers Need to Know”
Meta: “Thinking about Oakwood Heights? Get school district ratings, current median prices, commute times, and what residents love most about this neighborhood.” (158 chars)
Word count: 950 words (definition block + FAQ added)
Local entities: Named elementary, middle, and high school; school district; specific highway and transit references; HOA structure note; median price range with MLS data context; named local amenities
FAQ section: 7 questions — “What schools serve Oakwood Heights?”, “Is Oakwood Heights a good investment?”, “What is the median home price?”, “How long does it take to commute downtown?” — all PAA targets
Schema: FAQPage + LocalBusiness JSON-LD injected
AI visibility: 2 speakable blocks targeting “what is Oakwood Heights like?” and “are the schools good in Oakwood Heights?”
The AI Opportunity: Buyers Ask ChatGPT Before They Call an Agent
Real estate buyers and sellers now begin their search in AI assistants. “What neighborhoods are best for families near downtown Austin?” “How competitive is the Denver real estate market right now?” “What does it mean if a house has been on the market for 60 days?” These questions are being asked of ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews — and the agents whose WordPress content provides the most structured, entity-rich, direct-answer responses are the ones getting cited as authoritative sources.
According to AEO research data, prospects who discover agents through AI-cited content convert 60% faster than those arriving through traditional search — they arrive pre-qualified and pre-trusting, having already consumed your expertise through an AI answer.
SiteBoost Pilot for Real Estate: What You Get
| Deliverable | Details |
|---|---|
| Site Connection & Audit | WordPress REST API connection, full content inventory, neighborhood content gap map, schema coverage report, hyper-local entity gap analysis, Before Baseline Report |
| 10 Post Optimizations | Full SEO + AEO + GEO on 10 highest-opportunity articles — neighborhood entity injection, school district references, FAQPage + LocalBusiness schema, speakable blocks, market data context |
| 60-Day Impact Report | Before vs. after: rankings for local queries, PAA placements, AI citation visibility, lead-stage keyword movement |
| Content priority strategy | Neighborhood guides first — highest local authority value, hardest for portals to replicate, most likely to surface in AI responses about specific areas |
| Price | $597 pilot — $767 value |
Interested in the SiteBoost Pilot for Your Real Estate Site?
We onboard sites personally. Email Will with your site URL and he’ll follow up within one business day.
→ Email Will — Start the Pilot
Email only. No sales call required. No commitment to reply.
Frequently Asked Questions: SiteBoost for Real Estate
How does SiteBoost help real estate agents compete with Zillow and Realtor.com?
National portals dominate generic real estate searches but cannot replicate the hyper-local expertise of an agent who actually sells in a neighborhood. SiteBoost optimizes the content type portals can’t match: neighborhood guides with named schools, specific commute corridors, HOA structures, and micro-market conditions. These hyper-local articles, properly optimized with FAQPage schema and geographic entity injection, rank for the long-tail searches buyers use when they’re committed to a specific area — the highest-converting real estate queries, and the ones where a local agent beats a national portal every time.
What real estate schema markup does SiteBoost inject?
For real estate WordPress content, SiteBoost injects FAQPage schema targeting buyer and seller process questions, LocalBusiness schema connecting content to the agent or brokerage entity, and HowTo schema for process-oriented content (how to make an offer, how to negotiate inspection repairs, how to understand a title commitment). For neighborhood and location content, geographic entity markup is injected to connect the article to specific named places Google’s knowledge graph recognizes — school districts, city boundaries, transit corridors.
How does AEO optimization help real estate agents win People Also Ask placements?
People Also Ask for real estate searches is dominated by process and local questions: “What is earnest money?”, “How long does closing take?”, “What schools serve [neighborhood]?”, “Is [city] a buyer’s or seller’s market?” A FAQPage schema block with 6–8 of these questions, structured with direct 40–60 word answers, positions your article for PAA placements that appear above organic listings. These placements are particularly valuable in real estate because they’re triggered by the exact questions buyers ask during active home search — capturing attention at the highest-intent moment.
Should real estate agents optimize blog posts or listing pages first?
Blog posts — specifically neighborhood guides and buyer/seller process content. Listing pages have short lifespans (the listing sells) and are largely commoditized across IDX feeds. Blog posts compound indefinitely. A neighborhood guide written and optimized today continues driving organic traffic and AI citations for years, regardless of what’s currently listed. SiteBoost focuses exclusively on evergreen WordPress post content — not IDX listing pages, which fall outside our scope.
Can SiteBoost help with real estate content for specific cities and neighborhoods?
Yes — geographic entity injection is one of SiteBoost’s core GEO optimization techniques. For each neighborhood guide or market report, we inject the specific named entities that establish local authority: school district names, named schools, transit lines, highway corridors, HOA names where relevant, and local landmark references. This geographic specificity is the primary signal Google and AI systems use to determine whether a real estate article represents genuine local expertise or generic content.
What real estate WordPress sites does SiteBoost work with?
SiteBoost works with any self-hosted WordPress installation used for real estate blogging: agent personal sites, brokerage websites, team sites, and property investment blogs. We work with any WordPress theme or page builder — IDX plugin configurations are not affected. The only requirement is that WordPress REST API is enabled, which it is by default. Zillow Premier Agent websites, Realtor.com profiles, and hosted MLS sites are not WordPress and therefore not compatible.
Leave a Reply