Which resource should I read first if I am brand new to SEO for note brokers?
Start with this hub to orient yourself, then move to the audit guide if you have an existing site or the checklist if you are starting from scratch. The audit surfaces what is wrong; the checklist tells you what right looks like and in what order to build it.
I am trying to decide whether SEO is worth it for my note brokerage — which page addresses that?
The cost guide and ROI analysis work as a pair. The cost guide sets realistic budget expectations; the ROI analysis shows you how to model search-generated leads against your actual deal values on mortgage notes. Read them in that order before making a budget decision.
Where do I find guidance on local SEO specifically for note brokers?
Local optimization — including state-level landing pages and local directory listings on note investor networks — is embedded in both the checklist and the audit guide. There is no standalone local page in this cluster; the checklist and audit both include dedicated local sections.
Does this resource library cover SEO for note investors, or only note sellers?
Both. The keyword strategy section of the checklist addresses the dual-audience nature of note broker sites — note sellers and note investors use different search queries and need different landing pages. The audit guide also flags when a site is optimized for only one audience.
Which page should I send to a business partner or investor who wants to understand the ROI case for SEO?
The ROI analysis page is built for exactly that use. It walks through how to model deal values on mortgage notes against a monthly SEO investment, using ranges rather than fabricated projections, so the logic holds up to scrutiny from a financially literate reader.
I have already read several resources here — when should I engage a professional SEO service rather than continuing DIY?
The hiring guide in this cluster covers that decision in detail. As a general indicator: if your audit reveals technical issues beyond your technical comfort level, you are in a competitive market, or you have run a checklist for three or more months without ranking movement, professional engagement typically accelerates results more than extending the DIY period.