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LangtonTools

Tool · Industry intersection

PageTag for fluid power

Landing page classifier and grader, applied to fluid power & hydraulics.

A single page can kill an entire fluid power campaign if it is misconfigured. Land an OEM design engineer on a product listing page (PLP) expecting deep spec sheets and ISO certifications, and they bounce. Land an MRO emergency buyer on a category landing page (CLP) instead of the product detail page (PDP) with in-stock inventory count and same-day shipping, and they churn. PageTag solves this by one-click classification: click on any page and get back whether it is CLP, PLP, or PDP, plus a 0-to-100 grade for how well it is set up for paid traffic. The grade breaks down by rule: 'spec sheets above fold', 'inventory-count visible', 'shipping-time callout', 'pressure-rating specs in H1'. This ends the recurring argument with the web team about which page is which. For a distributor with 2,000+ SKU pages, PageTag's auto-tagging into URL Vault means you never again run an OEM campaign to an MRO-focused page. The BOFU intent prompts are also useful: when PageTag detects a PDP, it surfaces a suggestion that this page should trigger a 'configure-and-quote' intent, not a 'learn about' intent. Recommendation: run PageTag on all 100+ landing pages in your current active set (do this monthly). When PageTag grades a page below 60, send a report to the web team with specific rule failures ('cross-reference table missing', 'pressure rating not in H1', 'stock status not visible'). Use PageTag's page-type classification to split your Shopping campaigns: route OEM audiences to CLP/spec-heavy pages, MRO audiences to PDP/inventory-focused pages.

About PageTag

One click on any page returns a classification — CLP, PLP, or PDP — plus a 0-to-100 grade for whether it is set up for paid traffic. Ends the recurring argument with the web team about which page is which.

Full PageTag page →

About fluid power

Fluid power buyers split into two distinct tracks: OEM design engineers selecting components for new equipment, and MRO maintenance buyers replacing failed parts. Both speak in part numbers, pressure ratings, and ISO standards — but they convert on entirely different campaigns.

Full fluid power playbook →