This page explains the AI Citation Position Analysis in full: what it is, what you receive, and why every engagement starts here. If you have already read the summary on the Work With Us page, this is the deeper version.
Why It Comes First
A publishing system only works when it is pointed at the right targets. Producing content without knowing where the openings are is how most agents waste a year writing posts that nobody, human or AI, ever surfaces. The Position Analysis is how the targets get identified before any monthly work begins.
It is a one-time deliverable, a flat $1,000, completed before monthly content production starts. The fee and the three deliverables below are fixed. What flexes is depth and pace: depending on when you start and how quickly you want content live, the analysis either fills the window before your first publishing month or moves at a more measured pace. The point is to get it right, not to fit it into a billing window.
What You Receive
1. AI Citation Landscape Analysis
I run structured queries across the questions buyers and sellers actually ask in your market, the kind of questions people now type into AI tools instead of a search box. These fall into three groups: buyer-intent questions, seller-intent questions, and process questions about how a transaction works. The queries run primarily against Google’s AI answer surfaces, where most of your prospects are already landing.
The report documents which names AI tools currently treat as authoritative in your market, which kinds of content are getting cited, who holds the recommendation slots, and where the gaps are that nobody has filled. That last part is the most valuable. The gaps are where the publishing work goes to win.
This is a snapshot taken at one point in time, meant to set direction. It is not an ongoing tracking service, and you are not paying for a monthly scorecard.
2. Competitive Positioning Report
I map five to eight named competitors in your market across the same set of questions. The report shows where you currently appear, where you do not, and which content patterns are earning citations for the agents and brokerages that do show up.
The purpose is not to grade anyone’s performance. It is to see exactly what is working in your market right now, and to identify the structural openings the monthly publishing work will pursue.
3. 12-Month Theme Calendar
The findings turned into a month-by-month publishing plan. Each month is assigned a theme drawn directly from the gaps and openings the analysis surfaced, with the reasoning attached so you understand why the work is being done in the order it is being done.
From your first publishing month onward, this calendar governs the coordinated content. It is the difference between a year of scattered posts and a year of work that compounds.
It Is Yours, Either Way
The analysis is useful whether or not you continue into monthly content. The landscape analysis, the competitive positioning report, and the 12-month calendar are yours to keep and act on, even if you decide to execute the plan yourself using the free guides on this site.
If you want to know what the analysis would show for your specific market, the conversation starts here.