--- title: "Entity Coverage on SaaS Landing Pages" description: "Modern rankings reward pages that mention the entities — products, integrations, standards, competitors — that the topic genuinely involves. Here's how to audit entity gaps on a SaaS page and close them without keyword-stuffing." url: "https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/entity-coverage-for-saas" verifiedAt: "2026-06-09" canonical: "https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/entity-coverage-for-saas" --- # Entity Coverage on SaaS Landing Pages > TL;DR — Entity coverage is what makes a page feel 'complete' to Google. On Invoicemonk, adding three missing entities — Stripe, ACH, recurring invoices — to a pricing page that already ranked position 24 moved it to position 7 in 19 days. The entities were already in the product; they just weren't on the page. In plain English: Entity coverage is the on-page practice of ensuring a SaaS page mentions every named entity (product, integration, standard, competitor) the topic genuinely involves. Comprehensive entity coverage signals topical depth that keyword density alone cannot. ## Key takeaways - List the top 10 ranking pages and extract every named entity each one mentions — the union is your coverage target. - Add only entities the page genuinely involves — fake mentions are spotted by both readers and Google's helpfulness systems. - Cover integrations by name: 'Stripe', 'QuickBooks', 'Slack' — not 'leading payment processors'. - Include competitor names on comparison pages — Google rewards transparency, not avoidance. - Entity coverage compounds with internal links — when each entity also links to a dedicated page on your site, topical signal multiplies. ## Definition Entity coverage for SaaS is the on-page discipline of identifying the named entities — products, standards, integrations, competitors, currencies, regions — a topic genuinely involves and ensuring the page mentions them where they're relevant. ## Why it matters A SaaS page that mentions 8 of the 20 entities competitors mention will read as thin to both Google and to visitors who came expecting comprehensive information. Coverage isn't about gaming density; it's about completeness. The page that actually says what integrations exist, what standards apply, and what alternatives compete is the page that ranks — because it is, in fact, more helpful than the one that doesn't. ## What an entity is and why Google cares An entity is a named thing the world has agreed on — a product, a person, a place, a standard, a regulation. Google's Knowledge Graph indexes them as nodes with relationships, not as keyword strings. When a page mentions Stripe AND ACH AND recurring invoices, Google reads that as a page about a coherent corner of the invoicing world — not three separate keywords. This is why entity-rich pages outrank synonym-rich pages on the same topic. Synonyms inflate density without expanding meaning; entities expand meaning by adding nodes to the graph the page covers. ## How to extract the entity coverage target Search your target query. Open the top 10 organic results in separate tabs. Read each one with a notepad open. Write down every named product, integration, standard, competitor, region, currency, and methodology you encounter. Tally how many of the 10 mentioned each entity. The ones that show up on 4+ pages are the coverage requirement; the ones on 7+ pages are non-negotiable. Anything mentioned by only 1–2 competitors is optional and should only be added if your product genuinely involves it. ## Adding entities without making the page feel stuffed Don't add an 'Integrations' section listing 30 products just to hit a count. Weave entities into the prose where they're already relevant: 'Charge cards with Stripe, send ACH transfers, and bill recurring invoices on a schedule' replaces 'Accept multiple payment types' and adds three entities without disrupting voice. If a section legitimately calls for a list (integrations, standards, supported regions) make it scannable: a 3-column logo grid, a checklist, or a simple bulleted list. Don't hide the list — Google reads scannable structure as helpful. ## The Invoicemonk pricing-page case Pre-rewrite: the pricing page mentioned 'card payments' generically. SERP top 10 all mentioned Stripe by name; 8 of 10 mentioned ACH; 9 of 10 mentioned recurring invoices. Rewrite: a single 40-word paragraph above the plan grid was rewritten to name Stripe explicitly, mention ACH, and reference recurring billing. No new sections, no schema changes, no link building. Position moved from 24 to 7 inside 19 days, with CTR rising from 0.4% to 4.1% as the page started showing in the entity-aware long-tail. ## Quick answers ### What counts as an entity for SEO? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/entity-coverage-for-saas#qa-entity) A named thing — a product (Stripe), a standard (SOC 2), a region (EU), a currency (USD), a person (Naval Ravikant), a methodology (RICE), a regulation (GDPR), or a competitor (HubSpot). Anything with a Wikipedia page or a dedicated landing page somewhere on the internet is almost certainly an entity Google tracks. ### How do I find which entities to add? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/entity-coverage-for-saas#qa-find) Open the top 10 ranking pages for your target query in tabs. Read each one and write down every product name, integration, standard, and competitor mentioned. The set that appears on 4+ of the 10 pages is the coverage target. Add those that your page genuinely involves; ignore the rest. ### How is this different from keyword stuffing? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/entity-coverage-for-saas#qa-stuffing) Keyword stuffing repeats the same phrase to inflate density. Entity coverage adds different named things relevant to the topic. The first is spam; the second is comprehensiveness. Google's helpful-content system distinguishes them by whether the mentions actually advance the reader's understanding. ### How many entities should a SaaS landing page mention? (https://serpnaut.xyz/playbook/on-page-seo-for-saas/entity-coverage-for-saas#qa-how-many) Match the median of the top 10. On a typical SaaS landing page that's 12–25 named entities — integrations, standards, use cases, competitors. Under-coverage hurts more than over-coverage; missing 8 entities your competitors all mention is the same signal as missing the topic.