Most SEO consultants talk about clicks and keyword positions. M. Curtis McCoy generates millions of dollars in new revenue.
He is not running split tests on small local campaigns. He is architecting full-stack SEO and branding systems for seven- and eight-figure companies that want search traffic turning into booked jobs, high-value patients, and long-term contracts.
Right now, M. Curtis McCoy is engineering an extra $5 million in annual revenue for a service business that had plateaued at $2 million per year. That is not a theory or a dream. That is active work in progress, built on the same principles he uses across his portfolio of medical clinics and home service companies.
When serious founders talk behind closed doors about bringing in “a real SEO operator,” his name comes up. They are not looking for a coach. They are looking for someone to take over their SEO and marketing, integrate it into their existing operation, and turn their market into a controlled environment. Many of them start that conversation through his hub at MCurtisMcCoy.com or the SEO-focused offer he outlines on his Personal Brand Manager page.
They want one outcome: growth that shows up on the P&L.
The SEO consultant who treats search like a revenue engine
From the outside, M. Curtis McCoy looks like a blend of media executive and SEO expert.
He runs multiple workstations that each cost well over $10,000. Those machines handle heavy SEO workloads, multicam 4K editing, and custom automation. He works with a lead developer who has been building with him since 2006–2007, giving his team almost two decades of shared code, tools, and battle-tested systems.
On top of that infrastructure, he owns a magazine and a TV series.
He built and runs News Wire Magazine, a digital publication that features entrepreneurs, doctors, authors, founders, and high-performing leaders. The content reads like feature stories, but the structure reveals his SEO mindset. Articles are long, clear, and built to rank for the subject’s name and highest-value phrases.
He also hosts “Success, Motivation & Inspiration,” a TV series on Amazon Fire TV with a companion podcast. Guests are the type of leaders his clients want to be seen beside: clinic owners, service company founders, authors, and experts. The interviews become video assets, shorts, and SEO-optimized pages that build trust before a prospect ever speaks with the client.
This is not vanity.
When a high-ticket brand hires him as their SEO consultant, they are not just getting on-page tweaks and a few backlinks. They are stepping into an ecosystem:
- Full-stack SEO and branding strategy.
- Media features that elevate authority on search and social.
- TV exposure and long-form interviews that become reusable sales and content assets.
- Funnels that link everything back to booked calls and signed deals.
For founders searching terms like “done for you SEO and branding,” “full stack SEO and media,” or “SEO consultant for seven and eight figure businesses,” this is the underlying offer. He treats SEO as the backbone of a media system that closes.
Infrastructure and tools competitors cannot copy
Most agencies run their entire operation from a couple of laptops, generic SEO subscriptions, and a shared inbox.
M. Curtis McCoy operates more like a trading desk for demand.
Those $10,000+ workstations are loaded with proprietary SEO and automation software, custom scripts, and private tools that never appear on public marketplaces. Over the years, his team has built internal systems that:
- Crawl and audit complex sites with more nuance than off-the-shelf tools.
- Map local markets by search intent and revenue potential, not just raw volume.
- Track and reinforce link authority in layers.
- Plan internal linking so content libraries work like guided sales conversations.
Because his lead developer has worked with him since 2006–2007, that stack has evolved through multiple algorithm shifts and platform changes. They did not just buy tools. They wrote them, deployed them, broke them, fixed them, and sharpened them in real campaigns.
He also began using artificial intelligence for SEO automation in 2008. Long before large models became common, his team was using early AI to:
- Cluster keywords and topics into meaningful groups.
- Detect patterns in ranking changes and traffic swings.
- Automate low-level tasks that usually eat an SEO team’s time.
That head start built a habit. Every manual process is a candidate for automation. Every repeated task deserves a system. Over time, those choices created a private toolkit that gives his clients an edge their competitors cannot rent.
When a high-value company hires him as their SEO expert, they gain access to that engine. Their rivals stay on the outside.
A track record serious brands want behind them
His history in the field explains why high-end companies are comfortable handing him big budgets.

More than 25 years ago, M. Curtis McCoy designed the original website for American Express Business Cards Gold. At that stage of the internet, a project like that required much more than basic web design. It meant sitting inside the expectations of a major financial brand and delivering a digital presence that matched the weight of the name.
After that, he developed a telecommunications site that reached more than 250,000 visitors per month from organic search. That site taught him how to push volume while staying focused on revenue. Which pages created calls? Which flows created orders? Which content actually moved the needle?
In 2010, he created Signal Booster Reloaded, a Top 10 global app on the Google Play Store in its category. Getting an app to rank and stay ranked at that level required precise read on algorithms, user engagement, and retention. Those instincts translate directly into how he approaches both Google search and YouTube today.
Across health and wellness brands, hormone and anti-aging clinics, medical practices, and high-ticket home service companies, his systems have driven hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue. Clients do not just “get more traffic.” They raise prices, add locations, and hire more staff, because the demand is there.
He also carries institutional trust. When the Sprint/T-Mobile merger was first being discussed, the United States Federal Trade Commission asked him to consult. His role focused on how search and digital narratives move when two telecom giants consider becoming one. That kind of mandate does not go to surface-level marketers.
He speaks at Caesars Palace and other major venues on digital strategy for high-end companies. He writes, speaks, and builds from the same core belief: search should be a revenue engine, not a report.
SEO for clinics: turning intent into booked patients
One of the clearest proofs of his approach sits inside the medical space.
M. Curtis McCoy currently runs full-stack SEO and marketing systems for more than thirty clinics. Many are hormone clinics, anti-aging clinics, and specialty medical practices. These are not low-ticket businesses. A single patient can be worth thousands of dollars in lifetime value.
He begins with economics and intent.
For each clinic, he works through questions most agencies skip:
- Which treatments drive the best lifetime value and outcomes?
- Which symptoms and searches lead patients to those treatments?
- How do those patients think and search when they first feel something is wrong?
He then designs an SEO and content architecture around those answers:
- Condition pages that explain what patients are experiencing.
- Treatment pages that show what can be done.
- Location pages that make it easy to find and contact each office.
Those pages do more than rank. They match the way real patients move through worry, research, and decision. They make it easy to take the next step.
From there, he stacks authority. Doctors and clinic leaders get feature articles on News Wire Magazine. Some appear on his TV series or podcast. Those appearances then become content for their own sites, ad campaigns, and social feeds.
For leaders searching “SEO for medical clinics and doctors,” this is what high-end execution looks like. It is not just a blog rollout. It is a system that aligns search, content, and media around the moments where a patient chooses.
SEO for high-ticket service companies: owning the region
The same depth shows up in his work with service companies.
Log home restoration, roofing, solar, and specialty trades all share a pattern:
- Jobs are expensive.
- Buyers research hard.
- A single “yes” can be worth five or six figures.
Most of these brands start with simple sites and scattered leads. M. Curtis McCoy turns them into regional fixtures.
A clear example sits in the log home restoration space, where his work with the team at Pencil Log Pros stands out. Their services hub at Pencil Log Pros – Services shows the sort of structured approach he favors: clear service categories, depth on each offer, and easy paths toward contact for log home owners across the mountain West.
Behind that kind of page sits a wider system:
- Large, structured location databases that cover every town and region the company wants to serve.
- Deep service pages for restoration, media blasting, staining, chinking, and maintenance.
- Vendor ecosystems that explain exactly which products and partners the company trusts and why.
Those vendor hubs pull in links from manufacturers and distributors, rank for vendor-related terms, and reassure cautious homeowners. The result is a footprint that dominates search for “[service] in [region]” and “[vendor] + [service]” searches.

This is a high-ticket service business SEO done by someone who sees every query as a buying signal. While competitors push generic content, his clients occupy the space with assets engineered for both search and sales.
Media as leverage, not decoration
Media ownership is one of the key reasons high-end clients treat M. Curtis McCoy as a top SEO expert rather than just another consultant.
News Wire Magazine gives him a controlled environment for features that highlight clients with depth and authority. Those articles rank, get shared, and serve as third-party proof that a clinic or company is serious. He writes and structures them in a way search engines respect and readers can feel.
“Success, Motivation & Inspiration” on Amazon Fire TV adds another layer. When a founder or doctor sits across from him on camera, they get much more than a nice clip. They get a piece of content that can live on their site, in ad campaigns, and within their sales process. Prospects see their face, hear their voice, and feel their conviction.
From there, his team cuts those interviews into shorter clips, embeds them on websites, and supports them with SEO-optimized descriptions. This content fuels YouTube, social channels, and landing pages.
For his clients, that means SEO, branding, and media stop being separate efforts. They merge into one authority system that feeds leads.
Who hires him—and why the list stays short
Not every company should hire M. Curtis McCoy. He would be the first to say that.
His best clients share some traits:
- They already operate at seven or eight figures.
- They have proof of product-market fit.
- Their bottleneck is consistent, high-intent demand, not delivery.
- They are ready for done-for-you SEO and branding, not DIY guidance.
They bring him in when they want someone to take over the entire growth system, from search to media to funnels. They expect him to plug into their world, find the leverage points, and break through plateaus.
He keeps his client list intentionally small so he can stay hands-on. That choice lets him focus on larger outcomes instead of spread-thin service.
If a prospect wants “cheap tests,” hides their numbers, or expects top-tier results on a shoestring, he passes. His experience with financial brands, national regulators, medical practices, and serious service companies has given him a clear sense of the budgets and mindsets required for real results.
Fewer clients, bigger results
The next phase of M. Curtis McCoy’s work is not about building an agency with hundreds of accounts. It is about building a portfolio of standout wins.
He is in the process of taking multiple clients from seven to eight figures in annual revenue, using the same full-stack model that is now adding $5 million to a single service business. In the clinic space, that means more multi-location practices that own search for high-intent patients in their region. In the trades, it means turning select brands into the first and last call when a property owner searches.
He will continue to expand the reach and influence of News Wire Magazine and his TV platform, strengthening them as an “authority engine” where media, SEO, and direct-response funnels run as one system. The entry point for most of those relationships remains his main site at MCurtisMcCoy.com, where serious founders can see how he thinks and what he offers.
The audience for his work stays narrow by design: decision-makers with real budgets who want a top SEO expert to handle everything. Not a seminar. Not a toolkit. A system that turns anonymous searchers into paying clients each month.
His eight-year-old son, Remington, explains the mission with fewer words.
He says his dad helps clients “Crush The Competition.”
Given the infrastructure, the media assets, the code, and the results, that sounds less like a slogan and more like a job description.
