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US Founder or Managing Partner

Radar benchmark for mongodb.com showing SEO score, pages, hubs, leafs, and SaaS platform SEO cluster data.
The benchmark summarizes mongodb.com with a 100/A score, 10,070 pages, 128 hubs, and 9,941 leaf pages.

What this page covers

US Founder or Managing Partner

If you are a US founder or managing partner, you may be trying to grow search visibility without building a bloated site full of unfocused SEO pages.

A practical first step is to use Radar to review your current structure, compare it with relevant US benchmarks, and decide which hubs, leaf pages, merges, or removals deserve attention first.

In brief

  • You may need a clearer view of which pages are invisible, under-indexed, thin, or poorly mapped to US use cases, industries, or buyer roles.
  • A benchmark-led hub-and-leaf review may fit if you want scalable search coverage without adding pages unless each one has a clear purpose.
  • Before you expand, check your actual site structure against benchmark context, then improve, merge, or remove thin SEO pages where the evidence supports it.

What to do

As a founder or managing partner, the practical tension is time. You may need search reach while also handling product, clients, hiring, fundraising, or operations, so page-structure decisions need to be clear before a larger SEO buildout.

Radar may fit as a US benchmark review, a hub-and-leaf structure check, or a page-priority map by use case, industry, or buyer role. The benchmark data shown for US SaaS, platform, SEO agency, and performance marketing contexts includes page counts, hubs, leaf pages, clusters, and scores.

A careful start is to review your current site first. From there, you can decide whether to build focused new pages, strengthen existing hubs, or remove or merge thin pages. That keeps the plan tied to observed structure instead of a generic content calendar.

What to keep in mind

Radar benchmark examples include Slack in a US SaaS and platform SEO cluster with 9,472 pages and a 100/A score, Ahrefs in a US SEO agency and company cluster with 1,871 pages and a 100/A score, and Jellyfish in a similar cluster with 1,277 pages and an 89/A score.

These figures are context, not a target or a promise. Your company does not need to copy another site’s page count or score. A smaller site may need fewer, sharper pages, while a larger one may need cleanup or clearer hubs before expansion.

This next step is reasonable if you want an evidence-based view of what to prioritize: where to create focused pages, where to improve existing ones, and where thin SEO pages may be better merged or removed.