Before Profit Labs™, this insurance comparison brand had a working site and some search visibility, but it was not turning that visibility into enough quote volume. A handful of terms ranked well, but most high-intent pages sat outside the spots that actually drive clicks. Their content was thin in the categories people use when shopping for policies, technical issues were slowing down indexing and page updates, and they were missing many of the comparison-style searches that bring in ready-to-convert visitors. They reached out because paid acquisition was getting more expensive, and they needed organic search to become a steadier source of policy quote requests across the U.S.
## What we changed
First, we rebuilt the content engine around search intent. Instead of publishing broad insurance articles, we mapped pages to the exact ways people search: carrier comparisons, policy type comparisons, state-specific buying questions, deductible and coverage explainers, and “best for” terms. We refreshed older pages that had some traction, expanded thin comparison pages, and added internal links between quote pages, guides, and FAQ content so authority flowed to the pages most likely to convert.
Next, we cleaned up technical SEO issues that were holding pages back. We improved crawl paths, tightened site architecture, fixed indexation waste, and standardized title tags, meta descriptions, canonicals, and header structure across key templates. We also added schema to support rich results and made FAQ sections easier for search engines to parse. On a site with a large number of similar pages, these fixes mattered because they helped Google better understand which page should rank for which query.
We also built authority with a focused link plan. That meant earning links to category hubs and comparison pages through digital PR placements, resource outreach, and linkable assets tied to insurance data and consumer savings topics. Rather than point links randomly, we used them to strengthen the parts of the site tied directly to quote demand.
Because this was a national SEO track, local profile work was not the center of the campaign. We still cleaned up core business citations and consistency signals where needed, but the main effort stayed on national rankings and scalable organic demand.
## Results
Over 9 months, top-3 rankings grew from 4 to 24. Page-1 keywords climbed from 31 to 184. Featured snippets increased from 2 to 17, which helped the brand occupy more screen space on competitive searches and win clicks even when larger publishers were in the mix.
The biggest business change was quote volume. Organic policy quotes rose from 510 per month to 3,890 per month. That is an increase of 3,380 monthly quote requests, or about a 663% lift. In practical terms, this meant a much larger pool of inbound leads without having to buy every visit through paid channels. More quote requests also meant more calls, more applications started, and more opportunities for the sales team to close policies from people already in shopping mode.
## 90-day plan from here
The next quarter focuses on three things: expanding state-level comparison coverage, pushing more priority terms from positions 4-10 into the top 3, and improving conversion paths on the highest-traffic quote pages. We’ll keep building authority to the pages closest to revenue while testing page layouts, FAQs, and trust elements that can turn more organic visitors into submitted quote requests.