For Real Estate

Does Claude recommend your agency when a buyer asks for an agent?

Relocation buyers, first-time homebuyers, and out-of-town investors increasingly open an AI assistant before they open Zillow. Mentioned checks whether your brokerage or agent name actually comes up — with the real quote to prove it.

What buyers actually ask

Real estate questions AI gets asked daily

These are the shape of questions Mentioned asks on your behalf — specific, local, and intent-driven, not generic "best real estate" prompts.

  • "Who's the best real estate agent in Denver for first-time buyers?"
  • "I'm relocating to Charlotte for work — which brokerage should I talk to about finding a house near good schools?"
  • "What real estate agent should I use to sell a condo in downtown Austin quickly?"
Why it matters

Real estate is local, high-stakes, and now AI-mediated

Buyers research before they ever call an agent

A homebuyer moving to a new city often has no personal referral network there. Asking an AI assistant "who's a good agent in X" is a natural first step — and whoever it names gets the call before you do.

Referral-driven agents have the most to lose

Most agents built their book on word-of-mouth and open-house visibility, not SEO. That means many strong local agents have almost no presence in the training data or web sources an AI draws from — a gap a Google ranking wouldn't reveal.

Team vs. solo, buy-side vs. sell-side matter

"Best agent for first-time buyers" and "best agent to sell fast" surface different names even in the same city. A single generic check for "real estate agent" can miss the specific niche where your business actually competes.

Try it with your agency or brokerage

Same free tool, same 5-question check — just enter your brand and a category like "real estate agent in Denver" or "brokerage in Charlotte for first-time buyers."

Run a free check