What Is the Difference Between 15, 35, and 70 SEO Pages?
Fifteen pages can prove the system, thirty-five can build a stronger market layer, and seventy can create a broader authority engine.

A 35-page build makes sense when the opportunity is big enough to deserve a real campaign.
A 35-page campaign is not for every business. It becomes worth considering when the company has valuable customers, several meaningful search angles, and enough competition that missing those searches costs real opportunities.
The reframe is that each tier should match the size of the opportunity and the value of one new customer.
A Reverse Target campaign gives the business more useful places to appear while customers are still researching. The pages are planned around the questions, comparisons, locations, and concerns that happen before the inquiry.
What a business owner should ask
Your best leads rarely take a straight path.
They may begin with a problem, compare alternatives, check trust signals, look locally, and then decide who deserves the conversation. ReverSEO builds pages for those moments.
When this becomes worth building
The right campaign does not chase every possible phrase. It focuses on the searches that could bring in better prospects, stronger trust, and more profitable inquiries.
Strong fit signs
- One new customer can create meaningful revenue.
- People compare options before they contact a provider.
- Trust, proof, location, or specialization affects the buying decision.
- Competitors are already visible in searches your business should be part of.
How ReverSEO helps
- ReverSEO fits when the page count is selected around business economics, competition, and search-map depth.
- The campaign turns scattered search behavior into a connected set of pages with clear purpose.
- The goal is to help the right prospect understand why the business deserves a closer look.
What a Reverse Target campaign can create
Why this is not random content
Random content fills a website. A Reverse Target campaign fills gaps in the buying journey.
- Each page needs a real search purpose.
- Each page should answer a different concern.
- Each page should connect naturally to the offer.
- Each page should make the next step easier for a qualified lead.
How to decide if this search deserves a page
A page belongs in the campaign when it can help the business appear earlier, explain value better, or make a qualified prospect more likely to reach out.
| Question | Weak approach | Stronger approach | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| What is happening now? | The business may have a website, but important clients may still be finding other options first. | Fifteen pages can prove the system, thirty-five can build a stronger market layer, and seventy can create a broader authority engine. | The page has to make the missed opportunity easy to recognize. |
| Why does it matter? | Not every search is worth chasing. | The topic matters when it can lead to a profitable customer, not just more traffic. | This keeps the campaign focused on revenue, not vanity visibility. |
| What changes with ReverSEO? | Most sites wait for the buyer to arrive on a main service page. | ReverSEO fits when the page count is selected around business economics, competition, and search-map depth. | A campaign gives the business more ways to enter the conversation earlier. |
| What should the owner do? | Guessing at topics can create scattered content. | Start with a visibility review and build around the searches that influence real buying decisions. | The strongest campaigns are mapped before they are written. |
Explore related growth questions
Each guide looks at a different part of the same problem: how to help better leads find, understand, and choose the business earlier.
Questions before starting a campaign
These answers help a business owner decide whether ReverSEO is the right fit, the right timing, and the right level of investment.
Who is this guide for?
It is for a business owner who wants more qualified leads to find the company before they already know the brand name.
Why does this matter?
Fifteen pages can prove the system, thirty-five can build a stronger market layer, and seventy can create a broader authority engine.
What is the shift ReverSEO is trying to create?
The reframe is that each tier should match the size of the opportunity and the value of one new customer.
Where does a Reverse Target campaign fit?
ReverSEO fits when the page count is selected around business economics, competition, and search-map depth.
Is this only for big companies?
No. It is best for businesses with meaningful customer value. If one new case, project, booking, tenant, client, or premium order can justify the investment, a campaign can make practical sense.
What kind of business is usually a good fit?
Businesses with high-value customers, real competition, and a research-heavy buying process are usually the strongest fit. Examples include law firms, venues, contractors, photographers, consultants, clinics, retreat properties, professional services, and commercial leasing.
How is this different from regular blogging?
A blog usually starts with topics. A Reverse Target campaign starts with buyer behavior: what people search before they are ready to call, what they compare, what they doubt, and what would make them trust the business enough to inquire.
How many pages does a business need?
That depends on the size of the opportunity. A 15-page build can prove the model, a 35-page build can cover a serious market, and a 70-page build can support a broader authority campaign.
What should happen next?
The next step is a visibility review. ReverSEO can map the searches your best prospects make and recommend a campaign size that matches the opportunity.
Find out where your business is missing qualified searches.
ReverSEO fits when the page count is selected around business economics, competition, and search-map depth. ReverSEO can review the search paths your best prospects take before they know your name, then recommend the right Reverse Target campaign for the opportunity.