Most insurance agents who invest in SEO track the wrong number first. They watch keyword rankings move from page three to page one and call it progress — and they're not wrong, but they're measuring a leading indicator as if it were an outcome.
Rankings produce traffic. Traffic produces leads. Leads produce applications. Applications produce bound policies. Bound policies produce first-year commission. And retained clients produce multi-year commission streams. That chain has five steps between a ranking and revenue, and each step has its own conversion rate specific to your agency, your market, and your close process.
The reason this matters is that an agent writing primarily commercial lines in a competitive metro market and an agent writing personal auto in a mid-size suburban market might both achieve a page-one ranking for their target keyword — and see wildly different revenue outcomes. The ranking is equal. The business value is not.
A more honest measurement framework starts at the end of that chain and works backward:
- What is your average first-year commission per new client, by line?
- What is your expected retention rate at year one, year three, and year five?
- What percentage of organic leads convert to bound policies?
- How many organic leads per month is the SEO investment generating?
Once you have those four numbers — even as rough estimates — you can build a model that tells you how long it takes for organic search to pay for itself. Without them, you're comparing your SEO spend to a feeling rather than a forecast.
This page walks through how to construct that model for the most common insurance lines, and what to watch in your analytics to make sure the data feeding that model is accurate.