The Two Buyers
The restoration buyer knows they have a good stone surface that needs professional care. They’re searching for polishing, honing, refinishing, sealing — service verbs that describe work done to an existing surface.
The replacement buyer has decided they want something new. They’re searching for new countertops, countertop installation, stone fabrication, countertop cost. They’re not asking about saving what they have — they’ve already decided to replace it.
These two buyers cannot be served by the same service company. A stone restoration specialist polishes and repairs.
A countertop fabricator measures, cuts, and installs new material. If a restoration company’s ads appear for replacement searches, the lead will arrive expecting a new countertop quote and leave frustrated when the company offers polishing instead.
Restoration searches and replacement searches look similar. The buyers are completely different.
The Keyword Separation
Restoration — keep these
Marble polishing, travertine honing, stone refinishing, granite sealing, floor restoration, countertop polishing, stone repair, chip repair, etch removal, lippage removal.
These searches come from homeowners who know what service they need and are looking for a specialist. They’re high-intent, low-competition, and produce the right kind of lead.
Replacement — exclude these
New countertops, countertop installation, countertop cost, countertop replacement, kitchen countertop near me, quartz countertop price, granite installation.
A stone restoration company should add these as phrase-level negatives. Every click from a replacement searcher is wasted — the lead arrives for a service the company doesn’t offer.
The gray zone — review these individually
‘Countertop near me’, ‘stone company near me’, ‘marble company NJ’ — these searches could come from either buyer. Review the search terms report quarterly and classify each one based on conversion data.
The Resulting Account Structure
A NJ stone restoration company running this separation achieved 57 new jobs at $81 each on $4,627 in spend — a 12.3x estimated return.
Every dollar went to searches from people who wanted restoration, not replacement. The account had identified $85 per quarter in waste from replacement and unrelated searches before the exclusions were applied.
The competitive advantage is also meaningful. Restoration searches are less competitive than ‘new countertop’ keywords.
Home Depot, IKEA, and big-box retailers dominate the replacement keyword landscape. The restoration specialist faces far less auction competition on restoration-specific vocabulary — lower CPCs, higher impression share.
Material-Specific vs Service-Specific Keywords
Stone restoration campaigns should include both: the material (marble, travertine, granite, limestone, terrazzo) and the service verb (polish, hone, refinish, seal, restore, repair).
Material-only searches can come from replacement buyers. Service-verb + material is almost always restoration intent.
‘Marble’ alone — ambiguous. ‘Marble polishing’ — restoration intent. ‘Marble countertop replacement’ — exclude it. The combination tells you the buyer’s intent far better than either word alone.

