Pages Not Ranking for SaaS Companies
SaaS companies publish feature pages and comparison pages but often fail to rank because the content does not match the information-seeking intent of the keywords they target. Product pages try to rank for educational queries and educational content tries to rank for buying queries.
Why SaaS Businesses Face This
SaaS companies publish feature pages and comparison pages but often fail to rank because the content does not match the information-seeking intent of the keywords they target. Product pages try to rank for educational queries and educational content tries to rank for buying queries.
Most SaaS companies treat their marketing site as a static brochure that gets updated once a quarter. Meanwhile, competitors are running continuous experiments on headlines, social proof placement, and plan positioning. The gap between companies that test and companies that guess widens every month. Your CAC keeps climbing because your site conversion rate stays flat while ad costs rise.
The most common reason pages do not rank is that they are competing against each other. When you have multiple pages targeting similar keywords, Google has to choose which one to show, and often it picks none of them. This is cannibalization, and it is invisible in most analytics setups because you are looking at page-level metrics instead of keyword-level metrics.
The second cause is weak internal linking. You published the page, but the rest of your site does not point to it. Google discovers and values pages partly based on how many internal links point to them and from where. A page that exists in your sitemap but is not linked from your navigation, related content sections, or high-authority pages might as well not exist.
How to Fix Pages Not Ranking in SaaS
Map each target keyword to a specific intent stage and create the right page format for that intent. Build topic clusters with strong internal linking between educational content and product pages. Test meta descriptions to improve CTR from search results.
The fix starts with a technical audit to remove blocking issues, then moves to consolidating cannibalized pages, strengthening internal links to target pages, and aligning page format with search intent. Each change should be tested independently so you know which fix moved the needle.
Step 1: Run a crawl of your site and identify pages that target the same primary keyword. Look for cannibalization by checking which URL Google actually ranks for each target keyword.
Step 2: Check internal link counts for your target pages. If a page has fewer than 5 internal links pointing to it, it is probably under-supported.
Step 3: Search for your target keywords and analyze the format of results on page one. Are they lists, guides, product pages, or local results? Make sure your page format matches.
This Is Built For You If
Traffic floor: 10,000+ monthly organic sessions
Honest Callout
This is probably not a fit if:
- Pre-product-market-fit startups with under 1,000 monthly visitors
- Companies without a self-serve signup or trial flow
- Products sold entirely through outbound sales with no marketing site traffic
If your product doesn't have organic traffic yet, you need content and distribution first. Optimization without traffic is like tuning an engine with no fuel. Get to 10K monthly sessions, then we talk.
If You Want This Running Instead Of Reading About It
Not every site is a fit. We will tell you if this will not work.
What We Typically See
- Pricing page restructure increasing plan selection by 22%
- Feature page hero rewrite lifting demo requests by 31%
- Social proof placement test boosting trial signups by 19%
- CTA copy test on homepage increasing free trial starts by 27%
SaaS is uniquely suited to conversion optimization because the entire customer journey happens online, every interaction is measurable, and even small conversion improvements compound over thousands of monthly visitors. A 1% improvement in trial signup rate for a SaaS company with 50,000 monthly visitors and a $100/month price point translates to roughly $60,000 in additional ARR. Unlike physical products, there is no marginal cost to serving another customer, so every incremental conversion drops almost entirely to the bottom line.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you handle testing on pricing pages without disrupting existing customers?
We only test pricing page layout and presentation for new visitors, never changing actual prices mid-session. Existing customers accessing billing portals are excluded from experiments. We use audience segmentation to ensure only net-new traffic sees variations.
Can you test changes inside our product (onboarding, upgrade prompts)?
Yes, if your product is web-based. We inject lightweight testing scripts that work alongside your existing app. For native mobile apps, we focus on the marketing site and web-based onboarding flows.
How long does a typical SaaS test take to reach significance?
Most SaaS tests reach statistical significance in 2-4 weeks, depending on traffic volume. High-traffic pages like pricing and homepage can resolve in under two weeks. Lower-traffic feature pages may need 4-6 weeks.
How long does it take for a new page to rank?
Typically 3-6 months for a new page on a site with existing authority. If your domain is new or has low authority, it can take 6-12 months. Existing pages that you optimize can see ranking changes in 2-4 weeks as Google re-crawls them.
Should I delete pages that are not ranking?
Not necessarily. First determine if the page is cannibalizing another page, if it has any backlinks, and if it serves a user need. If it is cannibalizing, consolidate. If it has backlinks, redirect. If it serves no purpose and has no links, then yes, removing it can help.
How many internal links does a page need to rank?
There is no magic number, but your most important pages should be linked from your navigation, from related content pages, and from your highest-authority pages. As a baseline, your target pages should have at least as many internal links as your competitors' ranking pages.
How does pages not ranking affect SaaS Companies businesses specifically?
SaaS companies publish feature pages and comparison pages but often fail to rank because the content does not match the information-seeking intent of the keywords they target. Product pages try to rank for educational queries and educational content tries to rank for buying queries.