As of the November 2025 marketing review, Quarra Stone's website ranks primarily for branded search terms (variations of the company name). While this confirms strong brand recognition, it limits organic reach to users who already know the company exists. The strategic priority is to expand keyword coverage into non-branded, top-of-funnel searches that capture prospective clients who are searching by material, application, or craft — not by company name.
This is a common inflection point for niche B2B firms: early SEO wins come from branded terms, but sustainable lead generation requires ranking for the problems and materials buyers search before they know which vendor to contact.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Domain Rank | 33 (stable, down 1 pt — not significant) |
| Organic Traffic | Up (month-over-month) |
| Average Position | 13.2 (across all ranking keywords) |
| Top Ranking Terms | Primarily branded ("Quarra Stone," "Quarra") |
| Site Health Score | 99 |
The average position of 13.2 means Quarra is landing on page 2 for many queries — close enough that targeted optimization could push key pages onto page 1.
Ranking for your own name is necessary but not sufficient. Users searching "Quarra Stone" already know the company. The higher-value opportunity is capturing users searching for:
These non-branded, top-of-funnel queries represent buyers earlier in the decision process — and competitors who rank for them get considered first.
The primary lever is publishing blog posts and project pages optimized for terms real buyers search before they know Quarra exists. AAG (the agency) maintains a content calendar with planned topics and associated keywords.
Process change (established Nov 2025): AAG will share blog topics and target keywords with Quarra for pre-approval before drafting. This prevents factual errors (two drafts were killed in Nov 2025 due to technical inaccuracies — one on Vols Quartzite use in fine arts, one conflating masonry pointing with stone pointing) and ensures topics align with actual Quarra expertise and market positioning.
Stale content that hasn't been updated loses Google weighting over time. Existing blog posts and project pages should be periodically refreshed — updated copy, improved internal linking, and refined meta descriptions — to maintain and improve position.
Note from Nov 2025 review: Meta descriptions are being actively worked on to improve click-through rates, which are currently low despite reasonable impression counts.
Project pages are among the top-linked and top-trafficked pages on the site. Each new project added creates an opportunity to rank for location-, material-, and application-specific terms. Continuing to add projects (e.g., Miss Madison was recently added) compounds non-branded keyword coverage over time.
The homepage currently has 802 inbound links, the majority from internal linking. Ensuring project pages and blog posts link to each other — and to relevant service pages — distributes authority across the site and helps non-branded pages rank.
The Nov 2025 review surfaced a recurring risk: AI-assisted or generalist-drafted blog content can introduce technical errors that damage credibility with a specialist audience.
Established safeguard: lldurham (Quarra) will email Karly (AAG) the specific titles of drafts to kill or revise. Going forward, Karly will circulate the blog topic/keyword calendar to Lauren and Lincoln for review before drafting begins.
This pre-approval step is the critical control. For a firm like Quarra — where technical precision is core to the brand — a factually wrong blog post is worse than no post at all.
For niche B2B firms, branded-only SEO rankings are a ceiling, not a foundation. The path to top-of-funnel organic reach is consistent publication of technically accurate content targeting the materials, applications, and questions buyers search before they have a vendor in mind. Pre-approval workflows between agency and subject-matter expert are essential when the client's domain expertise is highly specialized.