How a 74-Page Website Got Cited by Google AI in 72 Hours
Ed Drost, Maryland Certified Residential Appraiser with 35 years of Baltimore market experience, launched a hyperlocal website and achieved a Page 1 ranking and Google AI Overview citation within three days. This is exactly how it was done.
in one sprint
Overview citation
expertise behind it
for target queries
Why real estate professionals are invisible in AI search
When a Baltimore homeowner types "what is my house worth" into Google, they now see an AI-generated answer at the top of the page — above every organic result, above every Zillow listing, above every local appraiser's website. If that AI answer doesn't cite a local expert, it's pulling from Zestimate data, national averages, and algorithm outputs that have no understanding of what makes a Canton rowhouse different from one two blocks away in Butchers Hill.
Ed Drost, Maryland State Certified Residential Appraiser (License #30004874) with 35 years of Baltimore market experience, recognized this shift in 2024 and set out to build the content architecture that would make local appraisal expertise the source AI cites — not the source AI replaces.
What AI gets wrong about Baltimore real estate
Exactly how the 74-page site was built
The three factors that triggered the rapid citation
Hyperlocal specificity at scale
No national real estate site publishes detailed, current, appraiser-authored content about zip code 21224 in Baltimore. Or 21218. Or 21014. At that level of geographic specificity, there is no competition — and AI engines are desperate for accurate local answers.
Zero national competitionCredential-level entity authority
A Maryland State Certified Residential Appraiser license number, 35 years of documented experience, and a consistent entity profile across Google Business Profile, LinkedIn, Reddit, and YouTube created an entity trust signal that AI systems recognized as a primary authority source.
License #30004874Technical speed and structure
Static HTML pages load in under 200 milliseconds. Google's crawl budget goes further on fast sites. FAQ schema gave Google's AI extraction system exactly what it needed — structured question-answer pairs it could directly incorporate into AI Overview responses.
Static HTML + FAQ schemaHow appraisers and agents can replicate this
Choose your geographic target
Pick 10–20 zip codes or neighborhoods you serve. These become the backbone of your hyperlocal content architecture. The narrower your initial focus, the faster your first AI citations will appear.
Write your FAQ 10 for each market
What are the 10 questions buyers, sellers, and investors in your zip codes ask AI right now? Write direct 2-3 sentence answers for each. These become your first FAQ signal pages — published with schema markup on your own domain.
Embed your credential on every page
Your license number, years of experience, and service area must appear consistently on every page — not just your About page. This entity consistency is what triggers AI citation trust signals across all five engines.
Publish as static HTML, not WordPress
Static HTML pages load 5-10x faster than WordPress, consume less crawl budget, and have no plugin vulnerabilities. For a 20-74 page hyperlocal site, static HTML is the correct technical architecture — and it's what this framework is built on.
Activate the Citation Geyser
On launch day, post to GBP, LinkedIn, and Reddit simultaneously. Submit your sitemap. The Citation Geyser distribution ensures all five AI engines receive your signal within the same 24-hour window — compressing what might take months into days.
See the site that got cited in 72 hours
BaltimoresTrustedAppraiser.com is the live 74-page hyperlocal authority site — still ranking on Page 1, still earning AI Overview citations, still generating appraisal consultations for Ed Drost.
74 pages. Every Baltimore City, Baltimore County, and Harford County zip code Ed Drost serves. Estate appraisals, CHAP tax credits, divorce, PMI removal, FHA, SDAT appeals — all covered with the hyperlocal depth AI engines need to cite a source.
BaltimoresTrustedAppraiser.com — the 74-page proof
This is not a hypothetical. The site is live, ranked, and being cited by Google AI Overviews right now. Every element described on this page is deployed and working.
Ed Drost · Maryland Certified Residential Appraiser (License #30004874) · 36+ years of Baltimore market experience · Residential Appraisal Solutions LLC
Estate & Date-of-Death Appraisals
IRS Form 706 · probate court · step-up in basis
CHAP Historic Tax Credit Appraisals
Before & after appraisals · Baltimore City historic districts
74 Baltimore zip code pages
Baltimore City · Baltimore County · Harford County
Divorce, PMI removal, FHA & SDAT appeals
Every appraisal type covered with hyperlocal depth
Ready to build your own hyperlocal AI authority site?
The 24-Signal Blueprint includes the full site architecture, the FAQ schema template, the zip code content framework, and the Citation Geyser launch workflow — everything in the 74-page Baltimore build, adapted for your market.