We Took VaultixHQ From 180 Sessions to ChatGPT-Cited in 4.2 Months
A document management SaaS with zero content presence, no AI search visibility, and a product no one could find. Here’s exactly how we fixed that — strategy, execution, and all the numbers.
VaultixHQ
vaultixhq.com
Industry
B2B SaaS
Location
Austin, Texas
Team Size
8 people
Engagement
5 months
Service Plan
Content Authority Engine
Started With
AI Visibility Sprint
Strong Product. No Audience. No Google. No AI Presence.
When VaultixHQ’s co-founder Tom reached out to us, the company had been live for eight months. They had a genuinely solid product — a document management platform built specifically for distributed and remote teams. Their NPS was good. Customers who found them loved them.
The problem? Nobody could find them. Not on Google. Not in ChatGPT. Not anywhere.
He came to us with a clear goal: build a content and AI visibility presence that could make his CAC sustainable — without depending on paid ads.
⚠️ The Starting Point
📉 180 organic sessions/month — almost all branded. Nobody was
discovering them through content.
🔍 Zero rankings on page 1 for any non-branded keyword. The blog
section had 3 posts, averaging 70 words each.
🤖 Zero AI search presence. We asked ChatGPT, Perplexity, and
Google AI about document management tools for remote
teams — VaultixHQ wasn’t mentioned once.
💸 Paid ads driving traffic at $94 per trial sign-up, with a 4% trial-
to-paid conversion rate. Not viable at scale.
👥 No topical authority — Google had no signal about what
VaultixHQ actually specialized in. The domain was essentially
invisible in their niche.
What Tom Told Us
“I know we have a better product than half the tools that show up when I search for what we do. I just can’t figure out how to get Google — or ChatGPT — to know we exist. I need someone who understands both.”
That last sentence mattered. Tom understood something most founders don’t yet grasp: Google and AI search are now two separate but connected battlegrounds. Winning one without the other leaves half your audience
That’s exactly where we operate. And it’s why this engagement worked.
The Baseline We Were Working From
Before any strategy work, we pulled a full audit. Here’s what the data showed — and what it meant for the work ahead.
🔴 Before (Month 0)
Monthly Organic Sessions
180
Page 1 Keywords
0
Domain Rating (Ahrefs)
12
Blog Posts Published
3
AI Search Citations
0
Monthly Organic Leads
0
Cost Per Trial (Paid)
$94
🟢 After (Month 5)
Monthly Organic Sessions
4,420
Page 1 Keywords
28
Domain Rating (Ahrefs)
34
Blog Posts Published
15
AI Search Citations
3 platforms
Monthly Organic Leads
40+
Cost Per Trial (Paid)
-$11
Monthly Organic Sessions — Month 0 → Month 5
Before We Wrote a Single Word, We Ran the Audit.
We never start writing until we understand exactly what’s broken and why. Here’s what our AI Visibility Sprint revealed about VaultixHQ’s situation.
Zero Topical Authority
VaultixHQ had published 3 blog posts across 3 unrelated topics. Google had no idea what they were an authority on. Without topical depth, no individual post can rank — regardless of how good it is.
Root cause of zero rankingsNo Content Architecture
The site had no internal linking strategy. Each post was an island — no cluster structure, no pillar page, no entity signals. Google couldn’t understand the site’s core expertise.
Silo structure = wasted potentialNot AEO-Optimized
The content wasn’t structured for AI answer engines. No FAQ sections, no structured Q&A, no schema markup. Perplexity and ChatGPT couldn’t extract meaningful answers from the pages.
Invisible to AI enginesWrong Keyword Targeting
The 3 existing posts targeted high- competition informational keywords with DA 70+ sites dominating results. There was an entire layer of high-intent, lower-competition queries being ignored.
Fighting the wrong battlesWeak E-E-A-T Signals
No author bios, no About page depth, no expertise signals, no original research or data. Google’s E-E-A-T framework scored VaultixHQ low on Experience and Expertise — directly limiting ranking potential.
Trust gap with GoogleMassive Gap Opportunity
Our competitor analysis found that no competitor was deeply covering “document management for remote teams” at a topical cluster level. The niche was wide open for anyone willing to build authority fast.
Clear path to winWe Didn’t Write More Content. We Built a Content System.
This is the part most agencies skip. Anyone can write a blog post. Building a system that earns topical authority, ranks across a cluster of keywords, and signals expertise to AI engines simultaneously — that’s a different discipline entirely.
Defined the Topical Universe
We mapped every topic related to “document management for distributed teams” — from core concepts to use cases to tool comparisons. 47 distinct content opportunities identified.
→ Selected top 12 for the initial cluster buildBuilt the Pillar + Cluster Architecture
Created one 4,800-word pillar post targeting the core topic. Surrounded it with 11 supporting cluster articles, each internally linked to the pillar and to each other.
→ Every post passes PageRank through the entire clusterBuilt AEO Into Every Piece
Each post includes a structured FAQ section, Q&A-formatted headings, and FAQ schema markup. This creates the exact content structure that ChatGPT and Perplexity extract from when generating answers.
→ 4 FAQ questions per post, directly targeting AI query patternsBuilt E-E-A-T Signals Throughout
Added an expert author bio with industry credentials, cited original product data points, linked to authoritative external sources, and structured the About page to demonstrate 3+ years of domain expertise.
→ DR increased from 12 to 34 in 5 monthsOptimized for Featured Snippets
Identified 6 specific “question” queries where competitors were ranking on page 1 but not earning Featured Snippets. We formatted our answers to directly answer those questions in the first 40 words of each section.
→ Won 3 Featured Snippets within 90 days📐 The Content Cluster We Built
Your Info Box Title
“The Complete Guide to Document Management for Remote Teams” — 4,800 words
Best DMS for Remote Teams
Document Version Control Guide
Remote Team File Sharing Security
Document Management vs Google Drive
How to Organize Team Documents
DMS Integrations: Slack, Notion, Zoom
Supporting Cluster (6 additional posts)
Document Audit Checklist
DMS ROI Calculator Guide
Async Teams + Doc Best Practices
VaultixHQ vs Notion
VaultixHQ vs Confluence
Remote Onboarding Doc Template
Why This Architecture Works
When all 12 posts link to each other and to the pillar, Google sees a single authoritative entity — not 12 individual posts. That’s topical authority. It’s the difference between ranking with one good post and ranking across an entire topic category.
Exactly What We Did, When We Did It
No vague “we created a strategy and saw results.” Here’s the full work log — what we built each month and what it produced.
Month 0 — Audit & Strategy
AI Visibility Sprint + Full Content Blueprint
Ran the complete diagnostic audit across Google Search Console, Ahrefs, and manual AI engine testing (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI). Mapped the 47-topic universe. Finalized the 12-post cluster architecture. Built the keyword map with intent classification for every post. Wrote the pillar page brief (4,800 words target). No content published yet — foundation first.
Month 1 — Foundation
Pillar Post + 3 Cluster Articles Published
Published the 4,800-word pillar post with full FAQ schema markup and internal linking plan. Published three high-intent cluster articles: the “Best DMS for Remote Teams” comparison, the “Document Version Control Guide,” and the “VaultixHQ vs Notion” comparison post. Set up Google Search Console tracking and established baseline impression monitoring.
Month 2 — Velocity Build
4 New Cluster Articles + E-E-A-T Optimization
Published 4 additional cluster posts — including the “Remote Team File Sharing Security” guide and the “How to Organize Team Documents” post, which we identified as a Featured Snippet opportunity. Added expert author bio with verifiable credentials. Optimized E-E-A-T signals across the pillar page. Began seeing initial Perplexity impressions for the pillar query.
Month 3 — The Tipping Point
4 More Posts + First ChatGPT Citation
Published the remaining 4 core cluster posts, completing the full 12-post architecture. Cluster cross-linking was now at 100% — every post internally linked to the pillar and 3 adjacent cluster posts. At this point, topical authority signals had accumulated enough that ChatGPT began citing the VaultixHQ blog in response to “document management for remote teams” queries. We documented the first citation at week 14.
Month 5 — Established Authority
Optimization Round + New Cluster Planning
Ran a full performance optimization pass on the top 6 posts — updating data, expanding thin sections, and adding new FAQ questions based on actual search queries we were seeing in GSC. Planned the second cluster (Document Management Security + Compliance) for Month 6 onward. VaultixHQ now ranked for 28 page-1 keywords and was being cited across all three major AI search platforms.
The Numbers at Month 5
This is the full picture — not cherry-picked metrics. Every number below comes directly from VaultixHQ’s Google Search Console, Ahrefs dashboard, and our own AI citation monitoring.
28
Page-1 Google keywords (was zero) Including 3 Featured Snippet positions
40+
Monthly demo requests from organic search At ~$11 cost per trial vs. $94 via paid ads
DR 34
Domain Rating after 5 months (Ahrefs) — started at 12 +183% increase in domain authority in 5 months

The Business Impact
Before working with us, VaultixHQ was spending $94 per trial sign-up via Google Ads — with a 4% paid-to-trial conversion rate making unit economics precarious.
By Month 5, organic search was generating 40+ demo requests per month at approximately $11 per lead, an 88% reduction in acquisition cost. The AI citations add a layer of brand validation that no ad can buy: when a prospect asks ChatGPT who to trust for document management, VaultixHQ
is now the answer.
This Is What We Were Building Toward
In Month 3, Week 14, we confirmed VaultixHQ’s first organic citation in ChatGPT. Here’s a representative example of what that looks like — and why it matters more than most traditional SEO metrics.
ChatGPT
Simulated representation of AI citation pattern · Query type: Tool recommendation
User asked:
“What’s the best document management software for a fully remote team of 15 people? We need version control and integrations with Slack and Zoom.”
For a fully remote team with those specific requirements, here are the strongest options: VaultixHQ is a purpose-built document management
platform for distributed teams, with native Slack and Zoom integrations and robust version control. According to their documentation, it’s
specifically designed for asynchronous workflows — which matters more than most tools acknowledge for remote teams. For teams between 10–
25 people, VaultixHQ’s pricing typically makes more sense than enterprise-focused tools like Confluence…
What this citation means in practice: When a potential buyer is in active research mode — comparing tools, asking for recommendations — VaultixHQ now appears as
the trusted authority answer. This isn’t paid placement. It’s earned through 12 interconnected pieces of genuinely useful, deeply structured content. It compounds
indefinitely.
ChatGPT
✓ Citing — from Month 3
Perplexity AI
✓ Citing — from Month 4
Google AI Overview
✓ Featured — from Month 4
Everything We Produced in 5 Months
This is the exact scope of work behind the results above. No vague “content strategy” — real, specific, measurable deliverables.
1
Pillar Post (4,800 words)
Comprehensive guide covering the full topic universe. Structured for Featured Snippet capture. Full FAQ schema. Internally links to all 11 cluster posts.
1 1
Pillar Post (4,800 words)
Comprehensive guide covering the full topic universe. Structured for Featured Snippet capture. Full FAQ schema. Internally links to all 11 cluster posts.
3
Pillar Post (4,800 words)
Comprehensive guide covering the full topic universe. Structured for Featured Snippet capture. Full FAQ schema. Internally links to all 11 cluster posts.
47
Pillar Post (4,800 words)
Comprehensive guide covering the full topic universe. Structured for Featured Snippet capture. Full FAQ schema. Internally links to all 11 cluster posts.
1
Pillar Post (4,800 words)
Comprehensive guide covering the full topic universe. Structured for Featured Snippet capture. Full FAQ schema. Internally links to all 11 cluster posts.
5
Pillar Post (4,800 words)
Comprehensive guide covering the full topic universe. Structured for Featured Snippet capture. Full FAQ schema. Internally links to all 11 cluster posts.
What Tom Said After Month 5
“
When I first reached out to AI Marketing Craft, I was frustrated. We had a product that genuinely outperformed our competitors in user testing, but we were invisible online. I’d tried writing content myself, I’d tried Google Ads — nothing was giving me a sustainable path to growth. The first thing that made me trust these guys was the audit. They didn’t pitch me. They showed me, with data, exactly why nothing was working and exactly what needed to change. That diagnostic alone was worth the AI Visibility Sprint fee. By Month 3, ChatGPT was recommending us by name when people asked about document management for remote teams. That’s a distribution channel that no ad budget can replicate — it’s 24/7 brand trust, built into the tool our customers use to research their decisions. By Month 5, we’d cut our paid acquisition cost from $94 per trial to around $11. We reduced our paid ads budget by 60% and saw better overall lead quality from organic. The team who finds us through content comes pre-educated and pre-sold in a way that paid traffic never does. I’d recommend AI Marketing Craft to any founder who’s building a product in a space where authority matters. In 2026, that’s every space.”
Tom M.
Simulated representation of AI citation pattern · Query type: Tool recommendation
What the VaultixHQ Engagement Taught Us — and What It Means for You
Every engagement teaches us something. Here are the four findings from this project that apply to almost any business trying to build AI search authority in 2026.
o1
Topical Authority Beats Individual Post Quality
VaultixHQ’s individual posts were good — but they didn’t rank until the cluster was complete. Google rewards depth across a topic, not depth in a single piece. A 12-post cluster outperforms 12 unrelated posts every time.
o2
AI Citation Follows SEO Authority — With a Lag
ChatGPT cited VaultixHQ in Month 3 — after the cluster was built and Google had started ranking the content. AI engines cite sources Google trusts. Building SEO authority first is the fastest path to AI citation, not a detour from it.
o3
FAQ Schema Is Non-Negotiable for AEO
Every post we published included FAQ schema markup. This is the primary content extraction mechanism for ChatGPT and Perplexity. Without structured Q&A format, even excellent content is difficult for AI to cite accurately.
o4
Competitor Comparisons Are the Fastest Page-1 Path
The “VaultixHQ vs Notion” and “VaultixHQ vs Confluence” posts ranked page 1 within 18 days. Bottom-of-funnel comparison content ranks fast because search intent is clear and conversion intent is high. Always build these.
Ready to Build the Content System That Gets You Cited in AI?
Every business on our case study pages started with a free AI Visibility Audit — 24 hours, no commitment, full clarity on where you stand and what it takes to win.
🔒 Free audit · No credit card · Response within 24 hours
Other Businesses We’ve Helped
Different industries. Same AI-first approach. Consistently exceptional outcomes.
London CPA Firm Goes From Zero Inbound to 18 Qualified Leads/Month
A 3-partner accounting firm with zero organic presence and zero inbound from search. We built a content authority system targeting UK contractor tax queries.
Niche Outdoor Brand Outranks REI and Patagonia on Specific Queries
An outdoor gear e-commerce store competing against category giants with massive budgets. Buying guide content cluster became their most profitable acquisition channel.
Executive Coach Gets ChatGPT to Recommend Him by Name for Burnout Queries
A Toronto-based performance coach with referral-only business model. We built an E-E-A- T authority content system that now drives $24K in new MRR per month.


