---
title: "How to Write a CNC Machining Capability Page That Ranks"
description: "The structure, content, and SEO details behind capability pages that win procurement-engineer attention and rank in Google and AI search. With specific examples for 5-axis, Swiss, multi-axis, and prototype CNC work."
date: "2026-06-03"
author: "Manufacturing SEO AI"
tags: ["CNC machining", "capability page", "industrial SEO", "manufacturing SEO"]
keywords: "CNC machining capability page, machine shop website SEO, capability page template, CNC shop SEO, capability page checklist, machining capability page structure, industrial capability page best practices"
linkPhrases:
  - "capability page"
  - "CNC capability page"
---

A capability page is the workhorse of industrial SEO. For CNC machining shops specifically, it is the page that determines whether a procurement engineer searching for "5-axis aerospace machining ITAR-registered Texas" finds you, contacts you, and stays interested past the first paragraph. The difference between a capability page that ranks and one that does not is rarely creativity. It is structure.

This piece walks through the specific structure, content, and SEO details behind capability pages that win.

<KeyTakeaways>

- Procurement engineers want spec data, not marketing language. Lead with machine ranges, tolerances, materials, and certifications.
- A capability page should target one process per page, not all machining services in one URL.
- Capability pages benefit more from structured Schema.org markup than nearly any other industrial page type.
- Internal linking from materials pages, industries-served pages, and case studies multiplies a capability page's ranking strength.
- The capability pages that rank highest publish at least one hard-to-fake credibility signal (machine list, real customer logo with case study, certificate number) above the fold.

</KeyTakeaways>

## What a capability page actually needs to do

Three jobs, in order:

1. Match the exact query a procurement engineer types
2. Answer their qualification questions before they ask
3. Make the next step (RFQ, phone call) obvious

If the page does these three things, it ranks. If it focuses on awards, history, or "passion for precision," it does not.

## The structure that works

We have analyzed several hundred CNC machining capability pages that rank in the top 10 for high-intent queries. They share a remarkably consistent structure.

### Hero section: what you do and who you do it for

The hero needs three pieces of information:

- What specific process this page covers
- What materials, sizes, or industries you specialize in
- One concrete credibility signal

Example hero copy that works:

> "5-axis CNC machining for aerospace and defense. AS9100 certified, ITAR registered. Materials include titanium 6Al-4V, Inconel 718, aluminum 7075, stainless 316L. Part sizes up to 1500mm x 800mm x 600mm. Mill envelopes available on request."

Example hero copy that does not work:

> "Precision 5-axis CNC machining you can trust. Industry-leading quality with decades of experience serving demanding industries."

The first reads like a spec sheet. A procurement engineer can decide within 10 seconds whether to keep reading. The second reads like marketing copy. The engineer leaves.

### Machine list section

Publish your machines. Specific model numbers, travel envelopes, spindle speeds, tooling options.

This is the single most-skipped element on capability pages, and it is also the most useful. Buyers want to know which Mori Seiki, Mazak, DMG Mori, Okuma, Haas, or Hermle you run. They want to know your spindle RPM range. They want to know if you have probing, tool monitoring, or robotic loading.

A table works well for this. Include columns for machine, travel, spindle, control type, and special capabilities.

<DataTable caption="Example: how to publish a CNC machine list">

| Machine                   | Travel (X/Y/Z)        | Spindle           | Special           |
| ------------------------- | --------------------- | ----------------- | ----------------- |
| Mori Seiki NMV5000 DCG    | 730 x 510 x 510 mm    | 20,000 RPM         | 5-axis trunnion, probing |
| Mazak Variaxis i-700      | 700 x 700 x 600 mm    | 12,000 RPM         | 5-axis, integrated tool monitoring |
| Hermle C42 U              | 800 x 800 x 550 mm    | 30,000 RPM         | 5-axis, robot-loaded for lights-out |
| Okuma Multus B400-II      | 760 x 460 x 460 mm    | 6,000 RPM (turning)| Mill-turn, B-axis |

</DataTable>

Yes, this exposes your capacity to competitors. That is not the constraint you think it is. Competitors already know roughly what you run. Procurement engineers do not. The page is for them.

### Materials worked in

A short list of the specific alloys, plastics, or composites you machine in production volumes. Each item should be a real alloy designation, not a category.

Good list:
- Aluminum 6061-T6, 7075-T6, 2024-T3
- Stainless 304, 316L, 17-4 PH, 15-5 PH
- Titanium 6Al-4V, CP Grade 2
- Inconel 625, 718
- Hastelloy C-22, C-276
- PEEK, Ultem 1000, Delrin

Generic list (does not work):
- Aluminum
- Stainless steel
- Plastics

### Tolerances and finishes

Publish your typical achievable tolerances and surface finishes. If you offer ±0.0005" on critical features, say so. If you can hit Ra 16 finish from the machine without secondary operations, say so.

<Callout type="insight" title="The hidden value of publishing tolerances">

Buyers often spec parts they do not need ultra-tight tolerances on, because they do not know which shops can actually hold tight tolerances economically. Publishing your real achievable tolerances lets buyers self-select to your shop for the work that fits.

</Callout>

### Industries served

A clean list of the industries you actually serve. Three to seven works well. More than that signals you serve nobody specifically.

Each industry can link to a dedicated industry page (aerospace, medical, defense, automotive). That cross-linking is where the topic-cluster magic happens.

### Certifications

Visible, specific certifications. Not just logos.

For an AS9100 certification, the line should read something like:

> "AS9100D certified, Certificate #12345 issued by NSF-ISR, current through Q2 2025. View certificate."

The link should go to your registrar's public certificate registry. This is what AI assistants extract and quote.

ISO 9001, AS9100, ISO 13485, IATF 16949, AS9120, NADCAP, ITAR registration, AS6081 — each should appear here if it applies, with the same level of specificity.

### Case studies / sample work

Three to five real, named (or anonymized but specific) case studies per major capability. Each case study should describe:

- The customer's industry
- The challenge (part complexity, tolerance, material, certification needs)
- The process used
- The result (delivered on time, met spec, cost target)
- The timeline

A photo of the actual part helps, even with NDA-style cropping.

### FAQ section

Specific questions buyers actually ask. Examples for a 5-axis page:

- "What is the largest part you can machine in 5-axis?"
- "What tolerances can you hold on Inconel 718?"
- "Do you offer prototype runs as well as production volumes?"
- "What is your typical lead time on aerospace parts?"
- "Do you handle first-article inspection (FAI) and PPAP?"

Mark this up with `FAQPage` schema. AI assistants extract these directly.

### RFQ / contact

The path to RFQ or quote should be obvious. A button at the top of the page and a form at the bottom. The form should not ask for information the buyer cannot yet provide (annual volume, exact part tolerances). Keep it to: name, company, email, brief description of part, optional drawings.

## SEO-specific details

Beyond structure, the technical SEO elements that matter most for capability pages:

### Schema markup

At minimum, include:

- `Service` schema describing the specific process
- `Organization` schema for your shop
- `FAQPage` schema for the FAQ section
- `BreadcrumbList` schema for navigation

If your page has reviews or testimonials, add `AggregateRating` only if the reviews are genuine and recent.

### Internal linking

Every capability page should link to:

- 3-5 related capability pages (5-axis links to 3-axis, Swiss, multi-spindle, lights-out)
- 2-3 relevant case studies
- 2-3 industry pages where this capability applies
- The materials pages for any materials prominently used
- A clear path to the RFQ form

The anchor text matters. Use descriptive phrases, not "click here" or "learn more."

### Page length

The capability pages that rank consistently for competitive queries run 800 to 1,500 words. Less than 500 words feels thin to both Google and buyers. More than 2,500 words usually means you have padded the page with marketing language that should be cut.

### URL structure

Use specific, hierarchical URLs:

- `/cnc-machining/5-axis` works
- `/services/cnc-machining-services-5-axis` is acceptable
- `/our-capabilities/precision-cnc/machining-page-1` does not work

## What to leave out

The single most common mistake is including content that belongs on other pages. Specifically:

- Company history (belongs on About Us)
- Employee photos (belongs on Team)
- Office photos (belongs on Locations)
- Press releases (belongs on News)
- Generic blog content (belongs on the blog)

A capability page is for buyers researching that specific capability. Everything else dilutes the page.

<InlineCTA title="See how your CNC capability pages currently rank" body="Run a free AI-visibility check on your shop. We'll show you how Google, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini currently describe your CNC capabilities, and what to fix first." source="article:cnc-capability-page-mid" />

## A 60-minute audit you can run today

If you have an existing CNC capability page, run it through this checklist before rewriting:

1. Does the hero state a specific process, specific materials, and a credibility signal in the first three lines?
2. Is there a published machine list with model numbers and travel envelopes?
3. Are specific alloy designations listed (not just "aluminum")?
4. Are tolerances and surface finishes published as numbers?
5. Are industries served listed and linked to industry pages?
6. Are certifications shown with certificate numbers and registrar names, not just logos?
7. Are there three or more named or specific case studies?
8. Is there a FAQ section with specific buyer questions and FAQPage schema?
9. Is the RFQ form one click from the page?
10. Does the page link to at least three related pages on your site?

If you score 7 or higher, your page is in the top decile of CNC capability pages on the public web. If you score 4 or lower, the page is leaving most of its potential ranking on the table.

For broader context on what drives CNC machining traffic in 2026, read the [CNC machining industry statistics report](/cnc-machining-statistics) and the [complete guide to SEO for manufacturers](/seo-for-manufacturers).
