Rank and Rent: $1000 a Month From Simple Local Websites


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Luke Van Der Veer

What if you could rent out digital real estate just as you would traditional real estate, but without all the headaches that come with maintaining a property?

That’s exactly what Luke Van Der Veer is doing with his digital “Rank and Rent” business.

What Luke does is he builds a local service business website, then “rents” it out to a local, less digital-savvy business that is more than happy for the extra leads.

Luke has been doing this for several years but said it took about 6 months to replace his day job income, and 12 months to hit 6-figures.

Today he runs a portfolio of over 100 different websites using this “rank and rent” model, earning predictable recurring revenue taking up just a few hours pre week.

Tune in to episode 448 of The Side Hustle Show interview to learn:

  • how Luke picks a niche and evaluates the competition
  • how to price your service
  • how to find qualified “tenants” for your digital properties

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Picking a Niche to Rank and Rent

Picking the right niche from the start is very important. You need to find a niche that has enough business to make it worth your time but also isn’t too competitive.

“There’s actually a lot of research that goes into it, and it’s about trying to identify a profitable niche,” Luke told me.

To get started with an idea, Luke said he looks at contracting sites like Thumbtack or HomeAdvisor. He brings up a list of contracting services and starts to look at services that interest him.

Some of the main criteria Luke uses to narrow down his niche selection are:

Competition

Luke explained higher-paying niches like law, plumbing, and real estate are generally higher in competition. He said he likes to “think outside the box” for lower competition niches, which are generally in “blue collar” industries.

The competition also varies a lot from city to city. You may find a certain niche is super competitive in Dallas, Texas, only to find it’s really low competition if you look for that same niche in New Jersey.

Low Seasonality

Seasonality also plays a big part when choosing a niche. You can enter into something like pool building all year round in Florida, but good luck getting pool building leads in New York during the winter.

Phone-Driven

Luke said it’s a lot easier to generate leads for a business where customers have to call for them to come out. This is why he likes contracting and service niches, as they are typically called to come out and do a job.

Licensing Not Required

Luke tries to avoid businesses that require a license number. There is a workaround, you can ask a licensed business to use their license number, but it’s an additional hoop to jump through.

City Population

Generally, Luke said he sticks to cities with a population between 50,000-400,000. This is the sweet spot where there is enough call volume to justify building a site, and the city isn’t so big that it’s too competitive.

Evaluating Competition in Google

When Luke has a niche that passes all the criteria above, he starts to perform searches in Google to evaluate the competition and get an idea of how quickly he can rank a site.

He picks what he thinks is the main keyword the sites are ranking for, such as “Roofing New York City” and uses Chrome extensions like Keywords Everywhere and Keyword Surfer to find the volume.

Taking the keyword “Roofing New York City”, Luke said this keyword gets 1,300 searches a month. He doesn’t recommend going after this keyword, but as an example, that’s a decent search volume.

Luke then looks at the organic results that come up for the keyword and pays attention to the Google My Business listings that appear in the map section you see on local searches.

Luke said he’s primarily looking for:

  • Businesses that don’t have a website listed in the map section
  • Businesses that don’t have many reviews
  • He’s also comparing the websites listed on the map against the organic results in hopes of seeing few ranking in both areas
  • Large companies like Yelp, Thumbtack, and HomeAdvisor ranking in the organic results over local businesses is also a good sign

Essentially, Luke is looking for how many businesses have a strong SEO presence. If there are few local businesses featured in the local map section and ranking organically, he knows he can build a site that will rank well.

Building a Rank and Rent Website

Once you’ve found a niche and are satisfied it’s well underserved, you can start building your own website with better SEO to rank well for your keywords.

Luke said the first thing he looks at on competitor’s sites is how much content they have. The less content the better, because he’s going to build a bigger site than his competitors.

“I’m going to take everything they talk about, and I’m going to write double of what they have,” Luke told me.

Luke added that he looks at all the topics being covered by all the sites ranking on page one, and he incorporates all of those into his site.

If you want to see how Luke structures the content for his sites, an example he shared is IrvingTxCarpetCleaning.com.

You can see how he builds out the homepage as a hub listing all of the services he offers. He then creates a page for each service and links to them from the homepage.

Ranking on Page One of Google

Anyone who has built a website before will know it’s not as simple as launching a site and appearing on page one overnight.

Generally speaking, local SEO is a lot less competitive than ranking a site globally, but it still takes some work.

Here are a few things Luke does to try and gain visibility for his sites.

Signing up for Google My Business

You need to create a Google My Business profile for your site to appear in the local map section of the search results.

To do this, you need a physical address as Google will send you a card with an activation code. If you don’t have an address in the area you’re targeting with your site, Luke said you can use a virtual address or find someone local to accept the card.

The area you choose is important for your ranking as this is where your pin will appear on the map. It’s also the area where Google will assume you’re best placed to serve customers nearby.

Building Local Citations

Creating local citations means adding your business’s name, address, and phone number, and URL to other websites, directories, and review sites.

Luke usually uses Facebook, YellowPages, CityPages, Yelp, and other similar sites. He said the links from these sites are powerful as Google trusts these sites.

Something important Luke mentioned is to make sure you write a unique description for each citation. You typically get to write a few hundred words about your business, if you just copy and paste the same description Google may not index the links.

Getting Reviews

Reviews are good for both SEO and for adding some social proof that you’re offering a good service.

As soon as Luke starts sending leads to another company he asks them to try and get customers to leave reviews on his site.

This often requires some incentivizing, as the client would prefer the reviews on their site. So, Luke offers $50 per review, usually in the form of a discount on the monthly price for using his site.

Renting a Site and Forwarding Leads

With a site established, ranking well, and leads coming in, Luke has to first handle the incoming calls himself.

He acts as the secretary for the business and tells customers that all of the workers are out or busy and jots down the customer’s details.

Luke then finds a well-rated service provider in the area and offers them the lead. Once he’s started that relationship, he will offer them a few days of free leads to get a feel for the relationship.

Unless they’re too busy and can’t take on any more work, Luke said it’s usually an easy decision. After all, they’re getting a ready-made site ranking well and generating leads for their business.

Luke then uses CallRail.com, which is a call forwarding service to forward calls directly to the client’s number. Pricing starts at around $50/month, and it allows you to show a local number on your site as opposed to using an 1-800 number that people don’t like calling.

You get a custom dashboard and can pull reports showing you exactly how many calls were forwarded to your clients, giving you an idea of how much value they’re getting.

Another cool feature with CallRail is the ability to add a “whisper” message to phone calls. This means when the client picks up a call they hear an automated message telling them the call has been forwarded from you.

The customer won’t hear it, but the receptionist will hear something like “incoming call from Irving Carpet Cleaners,” so they can answer appropriately.

How to Price Renting Out a Site

To calculate a price to rent a site out, Luke first finds out how much the average cost of a job is for the industry and area he’s targeting.

He said he can usually find this information online from sites like HomeAdvisor. He then estimates how many calls he’s going to be forwarding based on his current volume, and asks the client what percentage of calls they will close on.

Luke then multiples the average cost of a job by the number of leads he estimates the client closing on to get an idea of how much revenue his leads are going to generate for the client.

He then tries to give the client an x10 value. Meaning, if he estimates he’s going to send $5,000 of business to a client, he will charge them $500/mo.

Across his entire portfolio, Luke said the average monthly rent he charges is in the $900-1,000/month range. (But he noted that not every site is rented yet, as some are still climbing in the ranks.)

Horror Stories and Worst-Case Scenarios

You are depending on your clients providing a quality service when renting out a site to them. Getting negative reviews will harm your site’s SEO and the potential to rent it out to another client.

Luke has had a few nightmares in his time doing this. One that sticks out was a restaurant cleaning service in Minneapolis, MN. He was sending free leads to a prospective contractor, and the client literally didn’t turn up to a job on day three and told the customer he wasn’t interested.

That put an end to that relationship pretty quickly.

The other risk is getting your site removed from the Google My Business listings. In this case, Luke needs to re-verify the site with a new virtual address.

What’s the Time Investment on These Sites?

Outside of the initial time investment involved in setting up a site, Luke said he only spends a couple of hours per week maintaining a site.

This is for things like updating plugins and making tweaks to the content if the client changes what they’re offering.

On the SEO side, Luke said that once a site is ranking well, it typically stays in a good position. And because the client keeps getting quality leads, the site turns into a pretty passive income stream.

What’s Next?

Luke is always building more lead generation sites and said most of this portfolio is still in the ranking phase and not ready to rent out yet.

He’s also creating a course that’ll take you through his process step-by-step and you’ll find all the details for this in his Facebook Group.

Luke’s #1 Tip for Side Hustle Nation

“Go for it!”

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Nick Loper

About the Author

Nick Loper is a side hustle expert who loves helping people earn more money and start businesses they care about. He hosts the award-winning Side Hustle Show, where he's interviewed over 500 successful entrepreneurs, and is the bestselling author of Buy Buttons, The Side Hustle, and $1,000 100 Ways.

His work has been featured in The New York Times, Entrepreneur, Forbes, TIME, Newsweek, Business Insider, MSN, Yahoo Finance, The Los Angeles Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Financial Times, Bankrate, Hubspot, Ahrefs, Shopify, Investopedia, VICE, Vox, Mashable, ChooseFI, Bigger Pockets, The Penny Hoarder, GoBankingRates, and more.

15 thoughts on “Rank and Rent: $1000 a Month From Simple Local Websites”

  1. Have thought about doing this with upscale real estate. The local market is hot. Just need to find optimal way to prequalify prospects on site and get commission from local agents for the leads.

    Reply
  2. I love this episode! The question I have is does he just not put contact information on the site until it is ranking high? What do you do with leads you may get before you’re ready to rent them to a company? I have to say, this is a very interesting idea!

    Reply
    • When you start getting leads, pick the 5 best clients, and send to each of them. Tell them you have more coming, are they interested.

      Reply
  3. Hi Nick & Luke,

    Great episode!! Very Tim Ferriss!!

    Can I ask, where does the liability (non-payment, dodgy workmanship etc) lie in this relationship, or how is it redirected to the contractor and not borne by the “digital landlord”??

    Thanks in advanced

    Reply
  4. Great episode just wondering if you create a site for one areas can you just duplicate the site and change the location, or do you need to update the content as well?

    Thanks

    Reply
  5. Hey everyone! Luke here. I appreciate your interest in Rank & Rent. I had a lot of fun chatting with Nick, and it was a pleasure to be on the show!

    Here are the answers to your questions:

    [Phil]:

    A number of colleagues and I have done lead generation for upscale real estate. It can be very lucrative, but it requires several tweaks to the process.

    Here are a few factors to consider:

    – A standard lead generation website won’t cut it. The website reflects the business, so a generic-looking site with some text and a few images won’t work. Luxury customers want a website with a premium feel, which costs money (or a sizeable time investment if you happen to know how to write custom code).

    – You need real agents on the website. Real estate is a personal experience. Luxury customers want to see who their local agents are – Names, Pictures, Bios, etc. If you’re not the agent or the broker, you would need to contact a company in advance and get their permission to use them on your website.

    – You need real reviews. One or two reviews from a friend isn’t enough to create trust. Luxury customers do a lot more digital digging that the average person who’s calling a contractor to get their toilet fixed. Luxury customers look for realtor and real estate agent reviews on Facebook, Yelp, Zillow, and more. A low number of reviews signifies that you’re new or inexperienced, which is often a big negative.

    – You need some properties to showcase. Having too few properties on the website makes your company look small, which also makes you look less experienced.

    [Tom]:

    The only contact information on the website is a tracking phone number. When a customer calls, it’s automatically forwarded to the business. The call transition is seamless – neither the customer nor the business notices any difference. The customer calls the phone number, and the business picks up. And if the customer submits the quote form, that information is emailed to the business automatically. We do not identify the business we are working with at all (unless they request it).

    If you receive leads before you’ve found a business to work with, you’ve got tons of options – (1) do nothing and ignore it, (2) start your own business and use the leads yourself, (3) sell the leads to a larger lead generation provider like Home Advisor, or (4) refer the leads to a business for free until you’re ready to charge a fee. Also, keep in mind that it doesn’t have to be a flat fee. You can do a revenue share, commission deal, pay per lead, pay per call, etc.

    [Jack]:

    I love Tim Ferriss, so I did my best to cover what I could in the limited time we had.

    Liability falls on the business doing the work; you simply provide information (leads) to a business.

    Negative reviews are your main concern. If the contractor you chose does a poor job, the customer may leave a negative review on Google, Facebook, Yelp, or one of the other social properties. Since you own the asset, that directly impacts you. We do our best to avoid that by following strict guidelines on which businesses to work with and by researching them ahead of time. If you still get a bad review, one option is to contact the customer to try to make it right and have them revise it. Another option is to simply bury the single negative reviews with a ton of positive ones.

    [Jason]:

    You can duplicate the website to keep its structure, formatting, colors, etc. We do that all the time to scale our businesses faster. But the content needs to be unique.

    ——————–

    Rank & Rent works well for 2 main groups of people:

    (1) Anyone who wants to create a passive or replace their job.

    (2) Business owners who want to generate their own leads without paying for advertising.

    ——————–

    If you have any questions or you’d like to get in contact with me, feel free to add me on Facebook or message me here: https://www.facebook.com/lm13vand/

    Talk soon,

    Luke

    Reply
  6. Nick,

    I really enjoyed your article! Nick, I started working for a company 2 months ago as a Business Development Manager in the Catastrophe industry (water and mold remidiation experts) in the Dallas/Ft. Wort area. The problem is that the business is 1 a year old business owned by the franchisee that hired me. The main company (franchisor) doesn’t provide us any leads and only has a link to our city (Keller, TX and we cover 20 surrounding zip codes) that a customer can click on in the franchisor website to get our info. It would take me too much time for me to try and set up a digital landlord site for us and it would be a conflict of interest for me. Question – can you make a DL site for our local business to get us leads? The franchisor has franchisees in 39 states with each franchisee having to pony up for their own website that in most cases doesn’t bring them leads. The franchisor domain/website is http://www.myalldry.com. I want to do the digital landlord business but I have been tasked with growing their business from the ground up as the franchisee I work for has never done outside sales prior to buying the franchise. Right now I have to build their business from the ground up and I cannot do both things. Can you help as we need commercial and residential leads? Our largest local competitors are – Paul Davis Remodeling, Blackmon Mooring, Dry Force, Servepro just to name a few.
    Thank you and hope to hear from you soon.
    My name is Ismael and my email address is idelg.id@gmail.com.

    Reply
  7. Hello, enjoyed this episode. Question, does Luke purchase domains for each business he is creating a site for? He mentioned that he has about 100 site rental clients. Does he have a domain for each of these?

    Thank you

    Reply

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