Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Welcome to AppraisersForum.com, the premier online community for the discussion of real estate appraisal. Register a free account to be able to post and unlock additional forums and features.
I went with "appraisal" as I tend to try to think of the client that I WANT to be looking for my service. I posed this same question to different types of my clients and was swayed by how the professional clients (attorney, CPA, asset manager) answered...appraisal then region & city. My website also shows that I get a 4 to 1 hit on appraisal to appraiser, but I guess that could be someone looking for a different "appraisal" and my site popped up or that my site is not close to SEO? Maybe I'm wrong?
Is there a service that could perform SEO on an X-Site? Is it pricey?
Both appraiser and appraisal are too general with massive competition for either - best to add a local modifier (ie: your city town or county) - most clients - both lender and non-lender want someone with stong local knowledge.
Alternatively you can go after specific "niche" users with targeting phrases ie: "certified real estate appraiser" or "certified estate appraisals" or "pmi cancellation" or "tax grievance", or "bail bond appraisal" or "Residential Appraisal Reports" etc. are a few I pursue...
However if you are talking about the "keywords" META tag in a web page you are wasting your time putting anything in there. The Search Engines have not used that for years due to people putting high ranking but irrelevant "keywords" to their site in this section just to get traffic.
I am talking about "pay per click" ads, directory keywords and interwoven keywords through-out the web-site text. There is no harm, however in including keywords and phrases in the meta tags, just be careful not to exceed the reccomended maximums.