How strong is your digital presence?
6 questions. 60 seconds. See exactly where you're visible — and where clients are slipping away.
Question 1 of 6
Do you have your own domain name — not a brokerage subdomain or Zillow profile?
e.g., sarahchenhomes.com vs sarahchen.remax.com
If someone Googles your name and profession, does your own website appear in the results?
e.g., "Sarah Chen realtor Austin"
If someone asks ChatGPT or Perplexity to recommend a professional in your area, are you likely to be mentioned?
AI tools pull from indexed websites — brokerage profiles rarely make the cut
Can you publish new content to your website — blog posts, market updates, client wins — without help from a developer?
Fresh content is one of the strongest SEO signals
Does your website load quickly and look polished on mobile devices?
Over 60% of referral searches happen on phones — slow or broken mobile = lost clients
Is anyone actively monitoring your site for outages, security issues, or technical problems?
A site that goes down over a weekend loses inquiries you'll never know about
What each gap is costing you
No own domain
Your name is buried inside someone else's brand. When you leave that brokerage, so does your web presence. Referrals who Google you find your broker, not you.
Not showing in Google
Clients who search your name before calling — and many do — are landing on Zillow or LinkedIn instead. That's not a warm lead, that's a cold redirect.
Invisible to AI search
ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews now answer "recommend a realtor in Denver." Without structured data and a real website, you simply don't exist in those results.
Can't update content
Google rewards sites that publish regularly. A website that never changes is treated as abandoned — and ranked accordingly. New listings, market updates, and blog posts are free SEO.
Slow or broken on mobile
Google uses mobile-first indexing. If your site is slow on a phone, it ranks lower for everyone — including desktop searches. And the client who hits a slow page? Gone in 3 seconds.
No monitoring
Sites go down. SSL certs expire. Plugins introduce vulnerabilities. Without monitoring, you only find out when a client mentions they couldn't reach you — or not at all.