A buyer-facing site is read as one commercial system.
The diagnosis starts from public pages, metadata, trust routes, docs, schema, CTAs, and answer-engine surfaces.
Average Position 41 for SaaS is a ProofLayered buyer playbook for B2B SaaS teams that suspect Google found the page but does not yet see enough relevance, proof, or authority to rank it near page one is quietly blocking revenue, AI-search sourceability, buyer trust, or conversion.
The experience
Follow the commercial sequence from public evidence to signed recovery work without decoding a raw audit dashboard.
The diagnosis starts from public pages, metadata, trust routes, docs, schema, CTAs, and answer-engine surfaces.
Leadership gets one constraint to act on first instead of a long generic checklist with no commercial order.
Visitor and contract context turns the public diagnosis into a decision case, while avoiding revenue guarantees.
Each pack names the owner, artifact, expected outcome, validation path, and signed evidence record.
Buyer intent map
ProofLayered turns this intent into visible public evidence, structured context, and fix packs that a leadership team can approve.
Buyer playbook
The missed signal is that Google found the page but does not yet see enough relevance, proof, or authority to rank it near page one. ProofLayered turns that public evidence into a Position Recovery Pack so the team can act before funding the wrong content, SEO, GEO, paid ads, agency, tool, or redesign bet.
ProofLayered uses the submitted public URL to decide whether this signal is the primary bottleneck before the team funds more growth work.
Google found the page but does not yet see enough relevance, proof, or authority to rank it near page one.
query-to-route fit, title clarity, internal links, original proof, and buyer-intent depth must be improved together.
the team celebrates discovery but still receives no meaningful demand.
Position Recovery Pack focused on query-level average position improvement.
The warning sign is simple: Search Console shows a weak average position around 41 with almost no clicks. In ProofLayered terms, that usually means Google found the page but does not yet see enough relevance, proof, or authority to rank it near page one.
The fastest useful check is not another broad audit. It is a route-level pass across the pages a buyer, crawler, and answer engine use before deciding whether to trust the company.
ProofLayered packages the finding into a Position Recovery Pack so the team gets a concrete next move instead of a generic SEO or GEO checklist.
The service becomes obvious when the next expensive option is unclear. A $490 diagnosis is cheaper than funding the wrong content, SEO, GEO, ads, agency, redesign, or tooling bet.
Because the team celebrates discovery but still receives no meaningful demand. The page or route may look acceptable, but the commercial system is weaker when Google found the page but does not yet see enough relevance, proof, or authority to rank it near page one.
Check whether query-to-route fit, title clarity, internal links, original proof, and buyer-intent depth must be improved together. If that evidence is weak, more traffic can amplify the same bottleneck instead of removing it.
ProofLayered diagnoses whether this is the primary blocker, signs the evidence record, and turns it into a Position Recovery Pack with the first fixes to ship.
No. ProofLayered improves public evidence quality, sourceability, trust, and conversion readiness, but it does not guarantee rankings, AI citations, or revenue.