Component 04
Onelo’s organic engine is attracting traffic, but the majority of it does not represent buyers. 62% of organic sessions come from informational queries with no commercial relevance to the product. The buyer-intent segment that does arrive converts well — the problem is its size. This is partly a downstream consequence of the Category Presence failure, and partly a content strategy problem that requires its own intervention.
This document covers all 11 signals in the Demand Match component. For each signal, you will find: what was assessed and why it matters, the specific findings for Onelo, evidence supporting those findings, and the recommended intervention.
A signal is a subcomponent of any of the ten layers that make up an organic growth engine. Each signal is assessed thoroughly following our methodology and assigned a status: Healthy, Fragile, Blocking, or Missing. For each signal, there is supporting evidence and recommendations for how to turn each signal healthy.
Demand Match is fragile because the traffic mix is structurally misaligned with the product’s buyer profile. The organic engine is attracting a large audience that will not convert, and a small audience that will. The small audience that does arrive converts above the category benchmark — which confirms that the product, the positioning, and the conversion experience are not the problem. The problem is volume and composition of qualified traffic.
Two causes drive this, and they require different interventions at different points in the sequence. First: the Category Presence failure (Component 03) means Onelo is absent from the search results where new buyers discover the category — so the engine is not attracting buyers who do not already know Onelo exists. This is addressed by the category page build. Second: the content strategy has optimised for awareness-stage volume rather than commercial demand — producing a large blog audience with almost no buyer intent. This is addressed by the funnel stage coverage programme and the content gap interventions in this component.
After the Category Presence intervention and the Demand Match content programme, the target state for this component is:
| Metric | Current state | 12-month target |
|---|---|---|
| Buyer-intent traffic share | 17% | 55–65% of organic sessions |
| Non-branded traffic share | 8% | 25–30% (driven by category page rankings) |
| Decision-stage keyword coverage | ~8 pages | 15–20 ranking pages |
| Organic session-to-lead rate (blended) | 2.1% | 3.2–3.8% (driven by better traffic composition) |
| Organic pipeline contribution | ~8% of new pipeline | 15–18% of total new pipeline |
Intent classification maps the full ranking keyword portfolio by the type of intent behind each query — whether the searcher is trying to learn something (informational), find a specific thing (navigational), research a purchase (commercial investigation), or buy something (transactional). For a B2B SaaS product, the commercial investigation and transactional categories are where buyers live. The distribution of intent types across the portfolio reveals whether the organic channel is positioned to generate revenue or just traffic.
Of Onelo’s 1,847 ranking queries, 17% are buyer-intent (commercial investigation or transactional), 48% are informational, and 35% are off-category with no connection to the product or ICP. The buyer-intent share of 17% is significantly below the 35–45% benchmark for a Series B SaaS company with a functioning content strategy.
The distribution is not evenly spread across page types. The 17% buyer-intent share is concentrated on 8 commercial and solution pages. The remaining 83% of ranking queries are distributed across 94 blog posts, almost none of which attract buyer intent. This means the blog — which represents the majority of Onelo’s organic surface area — is functioning as an informational library rather than a demand generation asset.
| Intent type | Ranking queries | Share of total | Est. monthly traffic | Traffic share | Commercial value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Informational | 887 | 48% | ~13,200 | 55% | Low — awareness only |
| Off-category / navigational | 647 | 35% | ~7,440 | 31% | Negligible |
| Commercial investigation | 261 | 14% | ~2,880 | 12% | High — but share too small |
| Transactional | 52 | 3% | ~480 | 2% | Very high |
| TOTAL buyer-intent | 313 | 17% | ~3,360 | 14% | Series B benchmark: 35–45% |
Full ranking portfolio classified by search intent
Onelo’s complete 1,847-keyword ranking portfolio classified by search intent using Ahrefs intent classification supplemented by manual review for ambiguous queries.
| Metric | Onelo (current) | Series B SaaS median | Series B SaaS healthy | Onelo gap to median |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buyer-intent query share | 17% | 38% | 45%+ | 21 percentage points |
| Buyer-intent traffic share | 14% | 30% | 40%+ | 16 percentage points |
| Informational traffic share | 55% | 40% | 30% | 15 points above median |
| Off-category traffic share | 31% | 15% | 10% | 16 points above median |
Buyer-intent traffic share — Onelo vs Series B benchmark
The blog — 94 posts representing the majority of Onelo’s organic surface area — is generating almost entirely informational and off-category traffic. The 14% buyer-intent traffic share is a structural consequence of a content programme optimised for volume rather than demand.
RECOMMENDATION
Introduce an intent filter into the content strategy immediately. Every new content brief must specify the intent type being targeted and justify informational content where commercial-intent alternatives exist. The correct target distribution for a Series B sales-led SaaS company is approximately: 40% informational (awareness and trust-building), 35% commercial investigation (evaluation support), 20% transactional (decision stage), 5% navigational. Reaching this distribution does not require deleting existing content — it requires redirecting the next 12 months of content production toward the commercial and decision stages that are currently almost absent.
This signal examines the raw traffic volume split between pages serving informational intent and pages serving commercial intent — not at the query level, but at the page level. It reveals the structural imbalance between where investment has gone (informational blog content) and where commercial value is generated (product and solution pages).
Informational pages receive 62% of total organic traffic. Commercial pages receive 14%. The remaining 24% lands on navigational pages (homepage, about, pricing). The 14% commercial share is the most diagnostic number: it means fewer than 1 in 7 organic sessions arrives at a page where conversion is architecturally possible.
The industry benchmark for a healthy B2B SaaS content programme at Series B is 25–35% of organic traffic arriving on commercial pages. Closing this gap from 14% to 25% would roughly double the addressable organic pipeline without acquiring a single additional session.
| Page type | Pages in category | Organic sessions / month | Traffic share | Conversion rate | Leads generated / month |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Informational blog | 94 | ~14,880 | 62% | 0.3% | ~45 |
| Navigational (homepage, about) | 4 | ~5,760 | 24% | 1.4% | ~81 |
| Commercial (product, solution, pricing) | 7 | ~3,360 | 14% | 5.8% | ~195 |
| TOTAL | 105 | ~24,000 | 100% | 1.3% blended | ~321 |
Traffic distribution by page type — organic channel
GA4 organic sessions segmented by landing page type. Page types classified as: informational blog (intent = learn), commercial page (product, solution, pricing — intent = evaluate or buy), navigational (homepage, about — intent = find Onelo specifically).
[Link to spreadsheet: GA4 — Landing page report — segment: organic traffic — date range: last 90 days — classify each landing page URL into: informational blog, commercial, or navigational — add classification as a manual column]
| Traffic category | Sessions / month | Leads / month | Pipeline leads per 1,000 sessions | At $25K ACV — pipeline value per 1,000 sessions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Informational blog | 14,880 | ~45 | 3.0 | $23K |
| Navigational | 5,760 | ~81 | 14.1 | $108K |
| Commercial pages | 3,360 | ~195 | 58.0 | $447K |
Revenue efficiency by traffic category
Each 1,000 sessions on commercial pages generates approximately 19x more pipeline value than the same 1,000 sessions on informational blog posts. Closing commercial traffic share from 14% to 25% would add approximately $132K in additional monthly pipeline value from existing traffic.
RECOMMENDATION
Target a commercial traffic share of 25% within 12 months. Two parallel interventions: (1) build category landing pages (Component 03 action plan) that rank for commercial-intent category queries — this adds commercially-aligned sessions rather than reducing informational ones; (2) improve navigation from informational blog posts to commercial pages so that the 14,880 informational sessions per month contribute more commercial navigation. The 3.2% of blog visitors who currently navigate to commercial pages (Signal 08) spend 4m 12s on site and convert at a strong rate — they are real buyers, currently underserved by the site’s internal link architecture.
B2B buyers move through a predictable sequence of search behaviour before selecting a vendor: they begin with problem awareness queries, move to category research, then to comparison and evaluation, and finally to vendor-specific queries. A well-built content estate covers all stages. A content estate built primarily for traffic will over-index on the top of the funnel, where volume is high, and underinvest in the middle and bottom stages where commercial value is concentrated.
Onelo’s keyword coverage is heavily skewed toward the awareness stage (76% of ranking queries) and almost absent at the consideration and decision stages. This is the structural consequence of a content programme optimised for traffic volume: awareness-stage keywords have high search volume and relatively achievable keyword difficulty, so they attract editorial investment. Consideration and decision-stage keywords have lower volume but dramatically higher commercial value — and they are almost entirely absent from Onelo’s portfolio.
| Buyer journey stage | Query examples | Onelo ranking queries | Onelo share | Target share | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness — problem recognition | 'how to improve employee onboarding', 'onboarding process problems' | 1,402 | 76% | 40% | 36 points over-indexed |
| Consideration — solution research | 'employee onboarding software', 'onboarding automation tools' | 291 | 16% | 30% | 14 points under-indexed |
| Evaluation — vendor comparison | 'onelo vs bamboohr', 'best onboarding software comparison' | 112 | 6% | 20% | 14 points under-indexed |
| Decision — vendor selection | 'onelo pricing', 'onelo demo', 'onelo reviews' | 42 | 2% | 10% | 8 points under-indexed |
Onelo keyword coverage mapped to buyer journey stage
Onelo’s full 1,847 ranking keyword portfolio mapped to four B2B SaaS buyer journey stages. Comparison against an idealised distribution for a Series B sales-led SaaS company.
| Query | Stage | Monthly volume | KD | Commercial value | Onelo position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| onboarding software for 500+ employees | Consideration | 480 | 38 | Very high — exact ICP | Not ranking |
| alternatives to Rippling for HR onboarding | Evaluation | 390 | 42 | Very high — buyer in eval | Not ranking |
| alternatives to BambooHR for mid-market | Evaluation | 310 | 36 | Very high — buyer in eval | Not ranking |
| onboarding software ROI calculator | Decision | 240 | 28 | High — decision tool | Not ranking |
| onboarding software implementation time | Evaluation | 320 | 31 | High — vendor eval concern | Not ranking |
| employee onboarding software pricing | Decision | 560 | 44 | Very high — purchase intent | Not ranking |
Consideration and decision stage content gap — high-value queries not currently targeted
High-value queries at the consideration and decision stages where buyers are active but Onelo has no ranking content. These represent the highest-priority content creation opportunities.
Every query in this table is one a buyer makes 2–6 weeks before selecting a vendor. Onelo ranks for none of them. A buyer searching ‘alternatives to Rippling for HR onboarding’ is actively evaluating the market — this is the most commercially valuable moment in the buyer journey and Onelo is invisible at it.
RECOMMENDATION
Build content for the consideration and evaluation stages as a deliberate programme running alongside the category page build. Priority order: (1) two competitor alternative pages — ‘alternatives to Rippling for HR onboarding’ and ‘alternatives to BambooHR for mid-market’ — these capture buyers in active evaluation and have lower keyword difficulty than primary category queries; (2) an onboarding software comparison guide targeting the evaluation stage; (3) an ROI calculator or pricing guide targeting the decision stage. These pieces represent the highest-value content investment available given Onelo’s current funnel stage gap.
Bottom-of-funnel (BoFu) keywords are the queries buyers use when they have made a category decision and are selecting a specific vendor. These include branded comparison queries (‘Onelo vs BambooHR’), pricing queries (‘Onelo pricing’), review queries (‘Onelo reviews’), and alternative queries (‘Onelo alternatives’). BoFu keyword presence reveals whether the organic channel is supporting buyers at the moment of maximum commercial intent.
Onelo’s branded BoFu keyword presence is adequate — the site ranks for its own pricing, reviews, and comparison queries because buyers searching these terms are already brand-aware. The critical gap is in non-branded BoFu queries: the comparison and alternative queries where buyers are evaluating Onelo against competitors without having decided to search for Onelo specifically.
Onelo ranks for zero non-branded competitor comparison queries — the ‘alternatives to Rippling’, ‘alternatives to BambooHR’, and ‘best onboarding software for [specific use case]’ queries where buyers who have shortlisted a competitor might discover Onelo as an alternative.
| BoFu query type | Example queries | Onelo ranking? | Position | Monthly traffic | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Branded pricing | Onelo pricing, Onelo cost | Yes — /pricing | Position 1 | ~890 sessions | Healthy |
| Branded reviews | Onelo reviews, Onelo G2 | Yes — via G2 | Position 2–3 | ~340 sessions | Healthy |
| Branded comparison | Onelo vs BambooHR | Yes — /pricing | Position 3–5 | ~180 sessions | Adequate |
| Branded alternatives | Onelo alternatives | Partial — via G2 | Position 6–8 | ~90 sessions | Fragile |
| Non-branded alternatives to competitors | alternatives to Rippling, BambooHR alternatives | No — 0 queries | Not ranking | ~0 | Missing |
| Non-branded comparison queries | best onboarding software comparison | No | Not ranking | ~0 | Missing |
| Non-branded ICP-specific queries | onboarding software for 500 employees | No | Not ranking | ~0 | Missing |
Branded BoFu presence — adequate. Non-branded BoFu presence — absent.
| Competitor | Alternative pages built | Est. monthly traffic from alt pages | Queries these pages capture |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rippling | 8 dedicated 'vs' and 'alternatives' pages | ~4,200 | 'alternatives to BambooHR', 'Rippling vs Deel', 'Rippling vs Workday' — and 5 more |
| BambooHR | 6 dedicated 'vs' and 'alternatives' pages | ~2,800 | 'alternatives to Rippling', 'BambooHR vs ADP', 'BambooHR vs Gusto' — and 3 more |
| Onelo | 0 dedicated alternative or comparison pages | ~0 | None — no presence in BoFu comparison searches |
Competitor alternative page analysis — what Rippling and BambooHR have built
Rippling earns approximately 4,200 sessions per month from pages specifically built to capture buyers evaluating alternatives. These sessions convert at 6–8% because the visitor is in active vendor evaluation. Onelo earns zero sessions from this source.
RECOMMENDATION
Build two non-branded alternative pages as a priority within the content programme: ‘The Best Alternatives to Rippling for Mid-Market HR Onboarding’ and ‘BambooHR Alternatives for Companies with 200–2,000 Employees’. Both pages should be framed as genuinely helpful guides — not pure product promotion — with Onelo appearing as a recommended alternative with specific reasons why it is a better fit for the mid-market segment. Include a comparison table, a pricing section, and a named case study. Target timeline: published within 8 weeks of the category page Phase 1 build.
The top organic pages by traffic assessment identifies which pages are actually generating organic sessions and classifies each by the commercial intent of the visitors they attract. This signal answers a question that aggregate traffic numbers obscure: of the pages that receive organic traffic, how many are commercial pages where conversion is architecturally possible, and how many are informational pages that serve awareness but cannot generate pipeline? The pattern of pages at the top of the traffic distribution reveals whether the content investment is being concentrated in the right places.
Of the top 10 organic landing pages by traffic volume, 3 are commercial intent pages — the product page and the two solution pages. These 3 pages receive 2,690 combined sessions per month, representing 11% of the top-10 traffic. The remaining 7 pages are informational or off-category: they receive 89% of top-10 traffic and generate almost no pipeline. The highest-traffic page on the entire site is a blog post about onboarding checklists, receiving 4,820 sessions per month at a conversion rate of 0.2%.
The two solution pages — /solutions/mid-market-onboarding and /solutions/remote-teams — are the only commercial pages in the top 10 and convert at 4.1% and 3.8% respectively. That the highest-converting pages are also among the lowest-traffic pages in the top 10 is the clearest expression of the Demand Match failure: the engine is directing the majority of its traffic to the wrong pages.
| Page | Monthly organic sessions | Primary traffic type | Commercial intent? | CVR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| /home | 6,840 | Mixed — brand + category queries | Partial | 1.1% |
| /blog/employee-onboarding-checklist | 4,820 | Awareness — checklist seekers | No | 0.2% |
| /blog/remote-onboarding-best-practices | 3,610 | Awareness — best practices | No | 0.3% |
| /blog/new-hire-paperwork-guide | 2,940 | Awareness — admin / compliance | No | 0.1% |
| /blog/onboarding-best-practices-2024 | 2,140 | Awareness — best practices | No | 0.2% |
| /blog/employee-experience-guide | 1,880 | Awareness — off-category | No | 0.1% |
| /product/onboarding-automation | 1,180 | Commercial — solution evaluation | Yes | 2.3% |
| /blog/hr-software-comparison-2024 | 1,040 | Commercial investigation | Partial | 1.8% |
| /solutions/mid-market-onboarding | 890 | Commercial — mid-market evaluation | Yes | 4.1% |
| /solutions/remote-teams | 620 | Commercial — remote team evaluation | Yes | 3.8% |
Top 10 organic landing pages — traffic, intent classification, and conversion rate
The top 10 organic landing pages ranked by monthly traffic. Each classified by the commercial intent of the primary traffic they attract, confirmed by reviewing the top queries driving traffic to each page in GSC.
The commercial pages in the top 10 have a combined traffic share of 11% but generate the majority of pipeline from this group. Every commercial page that lands in this table through a new category page build will shift the ratio. The goal is not to reduce informational traffic — it is to build enough commercial pages that rank that the ratio moves from 3:7 toward 8:12 within 12 months.
| Page type | Pages | Combined sessions / month | Leads generated / month | Pipeline value at $25K ACV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Top 5 informational blog posts | 5 | ~19,190 | ~48 | ~$370K / year |
| 3 commercial pages in top 10 | 3 | ~2,690 | ~116 | ~$894K / year |
Revenue efficiency contrast — top commercial pages vs top informational pages
The five highest-traffic informational pages and the three commercial pages in the top 10 compared on pipeline value generated from their current traffic.
The 3 commercial pages generate approximately 2.4x more annual pipeline value than the 5 highest-traffic informational pages combined, despite receiving 7x fewer sessions. Each commercial session is worth approximately 17x more in pipeline terms than an informational session.
RECOMMENDATION
Use the top pages intent distribution as a monthly tracking metric alongside the KPI dashboard. The target state is at least 8 commercial pages in the top 20 by organic traffic within 12 months — driven by new category landing pages ranking and entering the distribution. Do not attempt to convert informational pages into commercial pages; the informational traffic serves awareness and trust functions. The intervention is to build commercial pages that earn their own organic rankings and join the top-20 distribution on their own merit.
Query-to-page alignment assesses whether the pages buyers land on match what they were actually searching for. A page can rank for a query without satisfying it — because the ranking was earned through domain authority rather than content match. When a buyer’s query intent and the landing page experience are misaligned, they leave without converting regardless of how good the page is. This signal finds the most commercially damaging mismatches.
6 of the top 10 organic landing pages by traffic volume have a material mismatch between the query intent that drives their traffic and the content or experience those pages deliver. The two best-aligned pages are the solution pages (/solutions/mid-market-onboarding and /solutions/remote-teams) which convert at 4.1% and 3.8% respectively — significantly above the site average of 2.1%.
The worst misalignment is on the homepage, which ranks in the top 20 for several category-adjacent queries but delivers a brand-forward experience rather than a category-information experience. Buyers who search ‘what is onboarding automation software’ and land on ‘Onboarding, Reimagined’ do not get an answer to their question.
| Page | Primary query driving traffic | Query intent | Page experience delivered | Alignment | CVR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| /blog/employee-onboarding-checklist | employee onboarding checklist | Find a template or tool | Provides a checklist guide | Aligned | 0.2% |
| /home | employee onboarding software | Find category or evaluate | Brand aspiration — 'Onboarding, Reimagined' | Misaligned | 1.1% |
| /blog/remote-onboarding-best-practices | remote onboarding tips | Learn best practices | Provides a how-to guide | Aligned | 0.3% |
| /product/onboarding-automation | onboarding automation platform | Evaluate automation tools | Feature description page | Partial | 2.3% |
| /blog/new-hire-paperwork-guide | new hire documents | Find documentation help | Provides a documentation guide | Aligned | 0.1% |
| /solutions/mid-market-onboarding | mid-market onboarding software | Evaluate vendors for mid-market | Audience-specific landing page | Aligned | 4.1% |
| /blog/hr-software-comparison-2024 | hr software comparison | Compare HR tools | Comparison guide | Aligned | 1.8% |
| /blog/onboarding-best-practices-2024 | onboarding best practices | Learn best practices | How-to guide | Aligned | 0.2% |
| /blog/employee-experience-guide | employee experience | Learn about EX | EX topic guide — off-category | Aligned but off-category | 0.1% |
| /solutions/remote-teams | remote team onboarding | Evaluate remote solution | Audience-specific landing page | Aligned | 3.8% |
Top 10 organic landing pages — query driving traffic vs page experience delivered
For each of the top 10 organic landing pages by traffic, the primary query cluster driving that traffic was identified from GSC. The page experience was then assessed against the intent of that query: does the page immediately serve what the visitor was actually looking for?
The homepage is the most commercially damaging misalignment. It is the second-highest traffic page and receives buyer-intent traffic from category-adjacent queries — but delivers a brand aspiration message. Homepage buyer-intent bounce rate is 52%, above the 35–45% benchmark. The two solution pages demonstrate what correct alignment produces: query-matched headlines and conversion rates of 4.1% and 3.8% respectively.
RECOMMENDATION
Fix the homepage query alignment as a standalone priority — do not wait for the broader category page build. Rebuild the above-fold to communicate the product category, the ICP, and the primary outcome within the first screen. The solution pages demonstrate the correct pattern (‘Onboarding Software for Mid-Market HR Teams’) — apply the same structural model to the homepage H1. The product page misalignment is less severe and is addressed in Component 06. The category page build (Component 03) is the primary lever for increasing commercial traffic share: building 10–13 dedicated category pages is projected to add 8,000–12,000 commercial-intent sessions per month, moving commercial traffic share from 14% to approximately 45–50% of the expanded total.
The proportion of organic traffic that lands directly on product and pricing pages is a proxy for how much of the organic channel is operating at the commercial layer of the funnel. In a well-structured organic programme, product and pricing pages rank for their own set of high-intent queries and attract a meaningful share of total organic traffic independent of the blog. A low share indicates that commercial pages are not generating their own demand — they are only receiving visitors who navigate there from other pages.
Product and pricing pages account for 14% of organic sessions. The benchmark for a healthy programme at Series B is 25–35%. The 14% share means that commercial pages are not independently attracting organic traffic — they are almost entirely dependent on navigation from the blog or from direct/branded searches.
The pricing page is the notable exception: it ranks organically for ‘Onelo pricing’ (position 1) and for 2 pricing-adjacent queries, contributing to its 4.8% conversion rate. But it generates only 890 sessions/month — a small fraction of what it could attract if mid-market pricing queries were targeted.
| Page category | Pages | Organic sessions / month | Traffic share | Benchmark (Series B SaaS) | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commercial (product, solution, pricing) | 7 | ~3,360 | 14% | 25–35% | 11–21 points below |
| Navigational (homepage, about) | 4 | ~5,760 | 24% | 15–20% | Within range |
| Informational blog | 94 | ~14,880 | 62% | 40–50% | 12 points above |
Organic traffic distribution — commercial vs non-commercial pages
GSC click data segmented by page type for the last 90 days. Commercial pages defined as pages where a conversion action is architecturally possible: product pages, solution pages, and the pricing page.
Fewer than 1 in 7 organic sessions arrives on a page where conversion is architecturally possible. The 14% commercial traffic share is not a conversion problem — it is a page-mix problem. The commercial pages that do receive traffic convert at 2.3–4.8%. The channel is not broken; it is misdirected.
| Page | Current organic sessions / month | Primary keywords it could rank for | Est. potential sessions | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| /product/onboarding-automation | 1,180 | automated onboarding workflow software (880/mo), onboarding automation platform (2,400/mo) | ~3,200 | ~2,020 additional sessions |
| /solutions/mid-market-onboarding | 890 | hr onboarding tools for mid-market (1,600/mo), digital onboarding mid-market (590/mo) | ~2,400 | ~1,510 additional sessions |
| /solutions/remote-teams | 620 | onboarding software for remote teams (880/mo) | ~1,200 | ~580 additional sessions |
| /pricing | 890 | employee onboarding software pricing (560/mo), onboarding platform cost (320/mo) | ~1,600 | ~710 additional sessions |
| New category pages (10–13 pages to build) | 0 | All 8 primary CEPs + 3 white-space CEPs | ~8,000–12,000 | 8,000–12,000 net new commercial sessions |
Individual commercial page organic traffic — current vs potential
Each commercial page assessed for current organic sessions and estimated potential based on the category query volumes identified in Component 03. The gap column shows what additional monthly sessions each page could attract with dedicated category page architecture.
The category page build (Component 03) is the primary lever for increasing commercial traffic share. Building 10–13 dedicated category pages is projected to add 8,000–12,000 commercial-intent sessions per month — increasing commercial traffic share from 14% to approximately 45–50% of the expanded total.
RECOMMENDATION
Two parallel actions. First: build the 10–13 category landing pages identified in Component 03 — this is the primary mechanism for raising commercial traffic share and cannot be substituted by optimising existing pages. Second: rebuild the existing commercial pages as proper category landing pages rather than product feature pages — /product/onboarding-automation in particular is eligible to reach top 5 for medium-competition category queries with a page rebuild targeting the 2,400/month query. This editorial task runs concurrently with the new page builds and will improve commercial traffic share from existing pages before the new pages rank.
This signal measures how frequently organic visitors who arrive on non-commercial pages navigate to commercial pages during the same session. It assesses the effectiveness of internal content journeys — whether the site’s architecture guides interested visitors toward commercial content, or whether non-commercial pages function as dead ends.
3.2% of organic visitors who arrive on informational blog content navigate to a commercial page during the same session. The benchmark for a well-structured content-to-commercial navigation programme is 8–12%. The 3.2% rate is low but not negligible — it confirms that a segment of informational visitors does have commercial intent, and the site is not fully capturing it.
Session analysis reveals that the visitors who do navigate commercially spend an average of 4m 12s on the site and visit 3.8 pages before converting. The visitors who do not navigate commercially spend 1m 04s and view 1.3 pages. The commercial navigators are real buyers who are interested — they just need better pathways to commercial content.
| Metric | Visitors who navigate to commercial page | Visitors who do not navigate commercially | Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Share of blog organic sessions | 3.2% | 96.8% | 1:30 |
| Avg session duration | 4m 12s | 1m 04s | 4x longer |
| Avg pages per session | 3.8 pages | 1.3 pages | 3x more |
| Session-to-lead conversion rate | ~11% | ~0.1% | 110x difference |
| Benchmark navigation rate (Series B SaaS) | 8–12% | — | Gap: 4.8–8.8 points below benchmark |
Blog-to-commercial navigation rate — behavioural segmentation
GA4 session analysis for organic visitors landing on informational blog posts, segmented by whether the visitor navigated to a commercial page during the same session.
| Blog post | Monthly organic sessions | Navigation to commercial (%) | Why it works / does not work |
|---|---|---|---|
| /blog/hr-software-comparison-2024 | 1,040 | 9.4% | Comparison intent — buyer already evaluating. Inline CTA to product page mid-article. |
| /blog/onboarding-automation-guide | 680 | 7.1% | Solution-aware intent. Specific internal links to /product/onboarding-automation. |
| /blog/employee-onboarding-checklist | 4,820 | 1.2% | Awareness intent. No inline CTAs — only sidebar (invisible on mobile). Generic anchor text. |
| /blog/remote-onboarding-best-practices | 3,610 | 0.8% | Awareness intent. No product-relevant internal links in body content. |
| /blog/new-hire-paperwork-guide | 2,940 | 0.4% | Off-ICP topic. Audience is HR coordinators, not Directors. No commercial relevance. |
Top blog posts by commercial navigation rate — what works vs what does not
Navigation rate to commercial pages compared across the top 10 blog posts. Posts with the highest navigation rates identify what content type and CTA placement works — providing a template for the other 84 posts.
The two posts with the highest navigation rates share two characteristics: solution-aware or comparison intent, and specific inline links with descriptive anchor text pointing to relevant commercial pages. The high-traffic awareness posts have neither. This is a fixable architecture problem, not an audience problem.
RECOMMENDATION
Apply the pattern from the two high-navigation posts to the top 10 blog posts by organic traffic. For each post: (1) add a contextually relevant inline CTA in the body of the article — not in the sidebar — linking to the most relevant commercial page with category-keyword anchor text; (2) add a bottom-of-post module with one named case study and a ‘See how it works for teams your size’ CTA. Target: move the average blog navigation rate from 3.2% to 7–8%. On 14,880 blog sessions per month, this improvement adds approximately 710 additional commercial page sessions per month from traffic that already exists.
Aggregate conversion rate is a misleading metric when traffic quality varies significantly. This signal segments organic conversion rate by traffic intent type — buyer-intent, informational, and off-category — to reveal whether the low overall rate (2.1%) reflects a conversion architecture problem or a traffic quality problem. The distinction matters enormously for what to fix next.
Buyer-intent segment converts at 5.8% session-to-lead. Informational segment converts at 0.3%. Off-category segment converts at 0.1%. The 2.1% blended rate is a mathematical consequence of a traffic mix weighted heavily toward low-converting segments — not evidence of a broken conversion experience.
This is a critical diagnostic distinction. The buyer-intent segment’s 5.8% conversion rate is above the 3.8% category benchmark. That means when Onelo gets the right buyers to the site, the conversion experience works. The problem is not conversion architecture (though Signal 06 identified specific improvements). The problem is the ratio of buyer-intent to non-buyer traffic.
| Traffic segment | Organic sessions / month | Conversion rate | Leads / month | Benchmark CVR | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buyer-intent (commercial + transactional) | ~4,080 | 5.8% | ~237 | 3.5–4.5% | Above benchmark |
| Informational | ~14,880 | 0.3% | ~45 | 0.5–1.5% | Below benchmark |
| Off-category / navigational | ~5,040 | 0.1% | ~5 | — | Expected — not the target audience |
| BLENDED (all organic) | ~24,000 | 2.1% | ~287 | — | Misleading — mixes high and low intent |
Conversion rate segmented by traffic intent type
Organic traffic segmented by intent type using GSC query classification. Conversion rate calculated as sessions-to-lead for each segment.
| Scenario | Buyer-intent traffic share | Total sessions | Buyer-intent sessions | Leads at 5.8% CVR | Blended CVR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current state | 14% | 24,000 | 3,360 | ~195 | 2.1% |
| After category page build — 6 months | 28% | 32,000 | 8,960 | ~520 | 3.6% |
| After full demand match programme — 12 months | 45% | 38,000 | 17,100 | ~992 | 4.8% |
The blended rate trap — what 2.1% actually means
Increasing buyer-intent traffic share from 14% to 45% — while keeping the 5.8% CVR constant and growing total sessions through the category page build — increases monthly leads from ~195 to ~992. A 5x improvement from the same conversion experience, driven entirely by improving traffic composition.
RECOMMENDATION
Do not attempt to fix the blended conversion rate directly. The blended rate is a consequence of traffic composition, not conversion architecture. The correct intervention is improving traffic composition: more buyer-intent sessions through the category page build (Component 03) and the funnel stage content programme (Signal 03). Monitor buyer-intent segment conversion rate separately from the blended rate. If the buyer-intent rate drops below 4.5%, investigate Conversion Architecture. If it remains above 4.5%, the focus should remain entirely on driving more qualified traffic to the engine.
A content gap analysis maps the queries that exist in the market for each stage of the buyer journey against the queries Onelo currently ranks for — revealing where the content estate has holes. For Onelo, the buyer journey spans approximately 8–12 weeks from initial problem awareness to vendor selection. The analysis identifies the specific queries where buyers are active but Onelo has no content.
The most significant content gaps are concentrated at the consideration and decision stages of the buyer journey — precisely where commercial value is highest. At the awareness stage, Onelo has reasonable coverage (though skewed toward the wrong audience). At the consideration stage, coverage drops significantly. At the decision stage, coverage is critically thin.
| Funnel stage | Query | Monthly volume | KD | Competitors ranking | Content type needed | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Consideration | onboarding software for growing companies | 720 | 41 | Rippling, BambooHR, Deel | Category landing page | High |
| Consideration | HR onboarding platform for 500 employees | 480 | 38 | Rippling, BambooHR | Category landing page | High |
| Evaluation | alternatives to Rippling for onboarding | 390 | 42 | BambooHR, Lattice | Alternative comparison page | High |
| Evaluation | onboarding software implementation time | 320 | 31 | Rippling, Deel | FAQ content + dedicated page | High |
| Evaluation | alternatives to BambooHR mid-market | 310 | 36 | Rippling, Lattice | Alternative comparison page | High |
| Decision | employee onboarding software pricing | 560 | 44 | Rippling, BambooHR | Pricing guide / page | Medium |
| Decision | onboarding automation ROI calculator | 240 | 28 | Rippling | Interactive calculator | Medium |
| Consideration | onboarding software HRIS integration | 260 | 12 | No dedicated pages | White-space — first mover | Immediate |
Content gap by funnel stage — queries with volume where Onelo has no ranking content
Ahrefs content gap analysis: queries where Rippling, BambooHR, and Deel all rank but Onelo does not. Filtered to queries with commercial or evaluation intent and a minimum of 200 monthly searches.
The 8 gaps above represent approximately 3,280 monthly searches where buyer-intent visitors are finding competitors but not Onelo. At a 5.8% conversion rate, capturing these gaps would generate approximately 190 additional leads per month.
| Funnel stage | Current Onelo pages | Current coverage | Target pages | Gap to close |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Awareness | ~67 blog posts | Over-indexed | ~40 posts | Redirect investment to lower stages |
| Consideration | ~8 pages (blog + product) | Under-indexed | ~15–20 pages | 7–12 pages to build |
| Evaluation | ~4 pages (branded comparison only) | Critically thin | ~10 pages | 6+ pages to build |
| Decision | ~3 pages (pricing + branded BoFu) | Critically thin | ~8 pages | 5+ pages to build |
Funnel stage coverage summary — Onelo vs target distribution
The content gap analysis mapped to the overall funnel stage coverage picture, showing both the current state and what the gap-filling programme produces.
RECOMMENDATION
Prioritise the 5 ‘High’ priority gaps for content production in the 3 months following the category page Phase 1 build. The two alternative comparison pages (‘alternatives to Rippling’ and ‘alternatives to BambooHR’) should be built first — they have the highest commercial intent and the lowest keyword difficulty relative to their value. The HRIS integration page is the single highest-urgency build given its white-space status: no competitor has built this page and Onelo’s 14 native integrations make it the most credible possible publisher of this content.
Keyword cannibalisation occurs when multiple pages on the same site compete for the same query, splitting ranking potential and confusing search engines about which page is the canonical source. Cannibalisation typically causes both pages to rank lower than a single consolidated page would. It is particularly common on content-heavy sites where similar topics have been covered multiple times across different blog posts.
Three cannibalisation instances were identified in the Onelo content estate — all involving pairs of blog posts competing for the same or closely related queries. None are on commercial pages. In all three cases, consolidating the cannibalising pair into a single, stronger page would likely improve the combined ranking position and concentrate the authority currently split between them.
| Cannibalising query | Page 1 | Position | Page 2 | Position | Combined est. traffic | Impact of consolidation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| employee onboarding process steps | /blog/onboarding-process-guide | 11 | /blog/employee-onboarding-steps | 14 | ~280/mo | Consolidate → est. position 7–8, ~380/mo (+100) |
| remote onboarding best practices | /blog/remote-onboarding-best-practices | 8 | /blog/virtual-onboarding-guide | 19 | ~290/mo | Consolidate → est. position 5–6, ~420/mo (+130) |
| onboarding checklist template | /blog/employee-onboarding-checklist | 6 | /blog/new-hire-checklist | 22 | ~680/mo | Consolidate → est. position 4, ~820/mo (+140) |
Three cannibalisation instances — identified and quantified
Cannibalisation identified by searching Ahrefs for cases where two Onelo URLs rank for the same or near-identical query, both within the top 30 positions. All three instances involve blog post pairs — none affect commercial pages.
[Link to spreadsheet: Ahrefs Site Explorer — Top Pages report — export all ranking pages — filter to pairs where the same keyword appears in the top 20 queries for two different pages — sort by estimated traffic overlap]
| Cannibalising pair | Recommended action | Implementation | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Onboarding process guide + steps | Consolidate into one comprehensive guide. Keep the URL with more backlinks. 301 redirect the other. | Content team — 1 day. Dev — 15 min for redirect. | Week 1 — quick win |
| Remote onboarding + virtual onboarding | Consolidate. 'Remote' and 'virtual' are the same intent. Keep higher-authority URL. | Content team — 1 day. Dev — 15 min. | Week 1 — quick win |
| Onboarding checklist + new hire checklist | Consolidate into a comprehensive 'Employee Onboarding Checklist' resource. Add FAQ section and FAQPage schema. | Content team — 2 days. Dev — 30 min. | Week 2 |
Consolidation approach for each pair
RECOMMENDATION
Consolidate all three pairs in weeks 1–2 of the programme. This is a half-day task for the content team and a 30-minute task for development. For each pair: identify which page has more external backlinks (keep that URL), merge the content of both pages into a single stronger piece, and implement a 301 redirect from the discarded URL to the consolidated one. After consolidation, add a FAQ section with FAQPage schema to the ‘onboarding checklist’ page — it is the highest-traffic of the three and capturing the PAA appearance would add meaningful incremental traffic.