Passage order is the sequence of section jobs inside a page.
Behavioral flow is the way those sections move the user from entry to clarity, trust, choice, action, support, or the next page.
A page is not only a set of headings.
It is a route.
Each section has a job.
Some sections orient the user.
Some define the topic.
Some explain the problem.
Some reduce effort.
Some compare options.
Some prove claims.
Some route the user to another page.
Some support a CTA.
Some help users recover if they are not ready for action.
When those sections appear in the wrong order, the page can feel harder than it needs to be.
A page can include the right entities, terms, links, examples, proof, and CTA, then still fail because the user gets them in the wrong sequence.
That is why passage order belongs inside the behavioral topical map.
Behavioral topical maps add user movement, effort, trust, satisfaction, and feedback to topical structure.
User journey topical mapping defines the route across pages.
Behavioral internal linking turns that route into anchors, targets, and placements.
Effort score in content architecture measures the work users face.
User gain vs information gain scores value and progress.
Satisfaction signals for topical maps validate the structure after publication.
Trust paths in topical maps connect claims to proof.
Passage order connects those layers inside the page.
It decides what the user receives first, second, third, and next.

The simple definition
Passage order is the planned sequence of sections inside a page.
Behavioral flow is the reason behind that sequence.
A page with behavioral flow does not only ask:
- Which headings should appear?
- Which keywords should be included?
- Which entities should be covered?
- Which internal links should be added?
It also asks:
- What does the user need before this section?
- What does this section help the user do?
- What doubt appears here?
- What proof should appear before action?
- What link should appear at this moment?
- What effort does this passage reduce?
- What section should come next?
- What signal after publication should confirm the order?
This is the difference between outline generation and flow design.
An outline lists content.
A flow moves the user.
MIRENA should plan passage order before drafting, validate it before publication, and revise it after satisfaction signals arrive.

Why passage order belongs inside topical mapping
Topical maps are often planned at the URL level.
That is a start.
But users experience the map at the page and passage level.
They do not move through a spreadsheet.
They move through sections, links, examples, tables, proof blocks, CTAs, and support routes.
A topical map shapes page relationships.
Passage order shapes the experience inside each relationship.
For example, a page can link to content architecture blueprints from three different sections.
The link meaning changes by placement.
Placed near a definition, it works as orientation.
Placed near a process, it works as a method path.
Placed near a CTA, it works as a lower pressure route.
Placed near a trust gap, it works as proof support.
Same target.
Different passage role.
Different user effect.
This is why passage order and internal linking should be planned together.
A link does not only need a target.
It needs the right section context.

A page is a chain of jobs
A page should be treated as a chain of passage jobs.
Each passage should do one main job.
A weak page often mixes several jobs in the same section:
- definition plus sales pitch
- proof plus unrelated tangent
- comparison plus hidden CTA
- method plus advanced theory
- FAQ plus thin keyword coverage
- summary plus new information
This creates friction.
A strong page gives each section a clear role.
| Passage job | What it does |
|---|---|
| Orient | Tell the user where they are |
| Define | Explain the concept |
| Frame | Show the problem or context |
| Diagnose | Help the user identify their situation |
| Distinguish | Separate this concept from nearby ideas |
| Teach | Explain the method |
| Demonstrate | Show an example |
| Compare | Help users choose |
| Prove | Support a claim |
| Reassure | Reduce risk or doubt |
| Reduce effort | Make the task easier |
| Route | Send the user to the next useful page |
| Support action | Prepare the CTA |
| Convert | Ask ready users to act |
| Recover | Give unready users a safer path |
| Validate | Define feedback or success signal |
This is the MIRENA passage layer.
Each section has a function, not just a heading.

Passage roles in MIRENA
MIRENA should classify each passage before drafting.
The classification should appear inside the content brief.
Recommended passage role taxonomy:
| Passage role | Function | Common component |
|---|---|---|
| Orientation passage | Sets page context | Short intro, route note |
| Definition passage | Explains the concept | Direct answer, example |
| Problem passage | Names the friction | Contrast, symptoms |
| Scope passage | Sets boundaries | Included and excluded notes |
| Diagnostic passage | Helps users classify their situation | Checklist, decision cue |
| Method passage | Explains the process | Steps, workflow |
| Example passage | Shows use in context | Scenario, sample object |
| Comparison passage | Helps users evaluate | Table, criteria |
| Proof passage | Supports a claim | Source, case, method note |
| Trust bridge | Connects proof to action | Reassurance, expectation |
| Effort reducer | Makes the page easier | Summary, table, route block |
| Link route | Moves users to another page | Contextual internal link |
| CTA support | Prepares action | Proof, expectation, risk reduction |
| Action passage | Gives the CTA | Button, form, prompt |
| Recovery passage | Gives another route | Lower pressure link |
| Support passage | Helps stuck users | FAQ, help path |
| Feedback passage | Defines validation | Signal, prompt, survey cue |
A page does not need every passage role.
It needs the roles that fit the page job, user state, journey stage, and trust threshold.

Passage order by user state
The right order changes by user state.
A beginner does not need the same sequence as a skeptical buyer.
A support user does not need the same flow as a strategist.
| User state | Best early section | Proof timing | CTA timing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner | Definition and example | Later, after clarity | Late or soft route |
| Overwhelmed | Summary and route choices | Before comparison | After simplified path |
| Skeptical | Claim framing and proof | Early | After proof |
| Comparing | Criteria and tradeoffs | Near comparison | After choice support |
| Ready to act | Value and next step | Close to CTA | Earlier, with support |
| Stuck | Task step and support route | Only as needed | Not primary |
| Returning | Next layer and workflow | Method proof | After advanced route |
| Buyer | Fit, proof, risk reduction | Early and repeated | After trust bridge |
This connects to user journey topical mapping.
User state should drive passage order.
A generic outline cannot do that.

Passage order by journey stage
Journey stage also changes the flow.
| Journey stage | Strong passage sequence |
|---|---|
| Awareness | Problem → definition → example → orientation link |
| Diagnosis | Problem → symptoms → diagnostic model → route |
| Education | Definition → method → example → internal link |
| Comparison | Criteria → options → tradeoffs → proof → route |
| Trust check | Claim → proof → caveat → trust bridge → action |
| Action | Value → proof → expectation → CTA → recovery route |
| Support | Task → steps → FAQ → support route → feedback |
| Retention | Result → next workflow → deeper guide → feedback |
A page can serve more than one stage.
When it does, MIRENA should select a primary stage and a secondary stage.
The primary stage controls the main section order.
The secondary stage adds route blocks and recovery paths.

Passage order by page role
Page role should also define section sequence.
| Page role | Recommended flow |
|---|---|
| Definition page | Direct answer → plain explanation → example → related route |
| Hub page | Orientation → route groups → priority paths → support paths |
| Method page | Problem → model → steps → example → validation |
| Comparison page | Use case → criteria → comparison → proof → choice path |
| Proof page | Claim → method → evidence → limits → action return |
| Conversion page | Fit → value → proof → expectation → CTA → recovery |
| Support page | Task → steps → issue checks → support route → feedback |
| Bridge page | Context → reason to move → next path → recovery route |
This links passage order to behavioral topical maps.
The page role should be clear before the outline is written.
If the role is vague, the flow will drift.

The MIRENA passage sequence model
MIRENA should build a passage sequence from six inputs:
- Page role
- User state
- Journey stage
- Friction point
- Trust requirement
- Next path
Those inputs produce a section order.
Passage Sequence =
page role
+ user state
+ journey stage
+ friction point
+ trust requirement
+ next path
A simple method page may use:
Problem → Definition → Method → Example → Internal Link → Validation → CTA
A skeptical buyer page may use:
Problem → Fit → Proof → Method → Caveat → Trust Bridge → CTA → Recovery Path
A support page may use:
Task → Steps → Common Errors → FAQ → Support Path → Feedback Prompt
This is how MIRENA turns a topical map into page flow.

Passage order and cognitive effort
Poor sequence raises cognitive effort.
This connects to effort score in content architecture.
Cognitive effort rises when:
- advanced ideas appear before definitions
- proof appears before the claim is clear
- examples appear before the method
- CTAs appear before value is understood
- links appear before the user has a reason to click
- the page repeats context without progression
- sections introduce new ideas after the summary
- FAQ answers cover gaps that should be in the main body
Passage order reduces cognitive effort by giving users the right idea at the right time.
A page should not force users to assemble the logic alone.

Passage order and trust
Trust depends on timing.
Proof that appears too late may not help.
A caveat that appears too late may feel like a surprise.
A CTA that appears before proof may create doubt.
This connects to trust paths in topical maps.
Trust flow should follow this pattern:
Claim → Why it is reasonable → Proof → Limit or caveat → Trust bridge → Action
Weak trust flow looks like this:
Claim → CTA → Proof later → Caveat hidden
Strong trust flow gives proof before pressure.
For skeptical users, proof may need to appear near the top.
For ready users, proof can be concise but close to action.
For support users, proof should not interrupt the task.

Passage order and internal links
Internal links should be placed by passage role.
This connects to behavioral internal linking.
| Passage role | Best link type |
|---|---|
| Definition | Orientation link |
| Problem | Diagnostic link |
| Method | Process link |
| Example | Deeper guide link |
| Comparison | Criteria or alternative link |
| Proof | Proof or source link |
| Trust bridge | CTA support link |
| Effort reducer | Route or summary link |
| CTA support | Action or recovery link |
| Support | Help path link |
| Summary | Next step link |
A link placed in the wrong passage can feel random.
A link placed in the right passage feels like the next step.
This is why MIRENA should assign link roles and passage roles together.

Passage order and user gain
A section creates user gain when it appears at the moment the user needs it.
This connects to user gain vs information gain.
A comparison table creates user gain before a decision.
A proof block creates user gain before doubt blocks action.
A summary creates user gain before a complex model.
An internal link creates user gain after the current page has done its job.
A CTA creates user gain when the user is ready.
The same section can lose value if placed poorly.
For example:
- a great example placed before the concept may confuse
- a strong proof block placed after the CTA may be late
- a rich internal link placed in the intro may distract
- a detailed method placed before the problem may feel heavy
- a summary placed after the user has left cannot help
User gain depends on timing.

Passage order and information gain
Information gain should be sequenced carefully.
A new idea should not interrupt the main flow.
It should appear where it adds value.
This connects to novel subtopic discovery.
A novel subtopic may belong:
- in the intro if it reframes the whole page
- in the method section if it changes the process
- in the comparison section if it changes choice
- in the proof section if it supports trust
- in the FAQ if it handles a secondary question
- in another page if it deserves its own route
A page should not insert novelty only because the topic is related.
MIRENA should ask:
- Does this idea help the current section do its job?
- Does it belong earlier or later?
- Does it need a link instead of expansion?
- Does it raise effort?
- Does it create user gain?
Information gain must fit the flow.

Passage order and topic completion
Topic completion should include passage completion.
This connects to topic completion.
A topic may have every page and still miss key passage roles.
Examples:
- no definition passage for beginner users
- no proof passage before CTA
- no comparison passage for choice heavy pages
- no support passage for task based pages
- no route passage from hub to child pages
- no recovery passage for unready users
- no validation passage for strategic pages
A cluster is not complete if key pages lack the passage roles users need.
MIRENA should run passage completion checks for strategic URLs.

Passage order and content depth
Section order controls perceived depth.
This connects to content depth vs topic fit.
A deep page can feel easy if sections are sequenced well.
A short page can feel incomplete if the order skips the user’s needed step.
Content depth should be judged with sequence.
Ask:
- Does the page answer before it expands?
- Does the page define before it compares?
- Does the page explain before it proves?
- Does the page prove before it asks?
- Does the page route before the user gets stuck?
- Does the page summarize before complexity rises?
Depth without flow becomes load.
Flow makes depth usable.

Passage order and SERP entry pages
SERP entry pages need special flow.
A user can land deep inside a cluster.
They may not know the parent concept.
They may not have seen the hub.
They may arrive with a narrow question.
This connects to SERP URL clustering.
A SERP entry page should include:
- fast answer
- short orientation
- enough context to continue
- a clear route to deeper support
- proof if the answer creates a claim
- a next step path
- a recovery path for users not ready
A weak SERP page jumps from answer to CTA.
A strong SERP page answers, orients, and routes.
MIRENA should validate SERP entry flow before release.

Passage order and schema
Schema should reflect visible content.
Passage order helps schema safety.
A FAQ schema item should have visible answers in a useful place.
A HowTo item should have steps in the page flow.
A Review item should have visible review support.
A Service item should have scope, fit, proof, and next step.
A Breadcrumb item should reflect the real path.
Schema should not be added to content that is hidden, thin, misplaced, or unsupported.
MIRENA should hold schema if the passage order does not support the structured data.
For example:
- HowTo schema should not be used if steps are scattered.
- FAQPage schema should not be used if FAQs are weak keyword blocks.
- Review schema should not be used if review support is not visible.
- Service schema should not be used if the page lacks scope and trust support.
The structured data should follow the visible flow.

Passage flow patterns
MIRENA should keep reusable flow patterns for common page types.
Concept explainer flow
Use for definition and education pages.
Problem → Definition → Contrast → Example → Method preview → Next path
Best for:
- behavioral topical maps
- user gain vs information gain
- effort score in content architecture
Method page flow
Use for process heavy pages.
Problem → Model → Steps → Example → Validation → MIRENA workflow → CTA
Best for:
- user journey topical mapping
- behavioral internal linking
- passage order and behavioral flow
Trust page flow
Use for proof heavy pages.
Claim → Risk → Proof → Caveat → Trust bridge → Action → Recovery
Best for:
- trust paths in topical maps
- product method pages
- proof or case pages
Comparison page flow
Use for decision pages.
Use case → Criteria → Options → Tradeoffs → Recommendation → Proof → Next route
Best for:
- comparison content
- product alternative pages
- method comparison pages
Support page flow
Use for task completion pages.
Task → Steps → Common issues → FAQ → Support route → Feedback
Best for:
- help content
- implementation pages
- documentation pages
Hub page flow
Use for cluster parent pages.
Orientation → User routes → Priority pages → Proof paths → Support paths → Action route
Best for:
- topical map hubs
- content architecture hubs
- product workflow hubs
These patterns help MIRENA draft with purpose.

MIRENA passage order score
MIRENA should score passage order before publication.
Suggested range:
- 0 means poor flow
- 1 means strong flow
Recommended dimensions:
| Dimension | Weight |
|---|---|
| Page role fit | 0.14 |
| User state fit | 0.14 |
| Journey stage fit | 0.14 |
| Cognitive sequence | 0.12 |
| Trust sequence | 0.14 |
| Link placement fit | 0.10 |
| CTA timing fit | 0.08 |
| Effort reduction | 0.10 |
| Satisfaction signal readiness | 0.04 |
Suggested formula:
Passage Order Score =
(page role fit * 0.14)
+ (user state fit * 0.14)
+ (journey stage fit * 0.14)
+ (cognitive sequence * 0.12)
+ (trust sequence * 0.14)
+ (link placement fit * 0.10)
+ (CTA timing fit * 0.08)
+ (effort reduction * 0.10)
+ (satisfaction signal readiness * 0.04)
Status bands:
| Passage order score | Status | MIRENA decision |
|---|---|---|
| 0.00 to 0.20 | Broken flow | Rewrite outline |
| 0.21 to 0.40 | Weak flow | Reorder sections before draft |
| 0.41 to 0.60 | Serviceable flow | Improve sequence and links |
| 0.61 to 0.80 | Strong flow | Draft or revise with notes |
| 0.81 to 1.00 | Strategic flow | Publish candidate after validation |
A page should not move to final draft with weak flow.

Passage order risk levels
MIRENA should also classify flow risk.
| Risk level | Description | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Low | Minor section order issue | Edit or monitor |
| Medium | Flow creates user load | Reorder before publication |
| High | CTA, proof, or link timing creates risk | Revise and validate |
| Critical | Claims, schema, or action appear before support | Hold or compliance review |
High risk flow is not a style issue.
It can hurt trust, user gain, CTA completion, schema safety, and satisfaction.
MIRENA passage object
Each major passage should have a structured object.
Passage ID:
Page URL:
Parent cluster:
Parent node:
Page role:
Passage heading:
Passage role:
Passage sequence position:
Primary user state:
Journey stage:
Primary job:
Friction addressed:
Trust need addressed:
Effort reduced:
Information gain score:
User gain score:
Trust path relation:
Internal link relation:
CTA relation:
Schema relation:
Previous passage:
Next passage:
Flow risk:
Passage order score:
Required revision:
Feedback signal:
Revision trigger:
Owner module:
Validation status:
This lets MIRENA treat a section as a planned asset.
Example passage object
Passage ID:
pobf_trust_sequence_section_001
Page URL:
/topical-mapping/passage-order-behavioral-flow/
Parent cluster:
Topical Mapping
Parent node:
Behavioral Topical Maps
Page role:
Method page
Passage heading:
Passage order and trust
Passage role:
Trust bridge
Passage sequence position:
After effort section, before CTA and schema section
Primary user state:
Strategist
Journey stage:
Education to validation
Primary job:
Show how proof timing changes trust and action readiness
Friction addressed:
User may see proof as a content block instead of a sequence
Trust need addressed:
Shows why proof should appear before pressure
Effort reduced:
Trust effort and conversion effort
Information gain score:
0.76
User gain score:
0.82
Trust path relation:
Links to Trust Paths in Topical Maps
Internal link relation:
Proof link to trust path page
CTA relation:
CTA must appear after trust sequence section
Schema relation:
Schema held if visible proof flow is weak
Previous passage:
Passage order and cognitive effort
Next passage:
Passage order and internal links
Flow risk:
Medium if proof appears too late
Passage order score:
0.78
Required revision:
Add weak flow and strong flow examples
Feedback signal:
Scroll to trust sequence and clicks to Trust Paths page
Revision trigger:
Low engagement with trust section or high site search for proof examples
Owner module:
PassageRoleClassifier
Validation status:
Ready for validation
This is a page section managed by the system.
Not just text.
Passage sequence object
MIRENA should also store the sequence for the full page.
Passage Sequence ID:
Page URL:
Parent cluster:
Parent node:
Page role:
Primary user state:
Journey stage:
Sequence pattern:
Passage IDs in order:
Required passage roles:
Missing passage roles:
High risk passage positions:
Primary internal link positions:
Proof positions:
CTA position:
Recovery path position:
Schema supported passages:
Feedback signal positions:
Overall passage order score:
Release decision:
Owner module:
Validation status:
Example sequence object
Passage Sequence ID:
pobf_sequence_page_001
Page URL:
/topical-mapping/passage-order-behavioral-flow/
Parent cluster:
Topical Mapping
Parent node:
Behavioral Topical Maps
Page role:
Method page
Primary user state:
Strategist
Journey stage:
Education to validation
Sequence pattern:
Problem → Definition → Role taxonomy → User state flow → Journey flow → Effort → Trust → Links → Gain → SERP → Schema → Score model → Audit → MIRENA workflow → CTA → FAQ
Passage IDs in order:
intro, definition, topical_map_context, job_chain, role_taxonomy, user_state_order, journey_order, page_role_order, sequence_model, effort_section, trust_section, internal_links_section, user_gain_section, information_gain_section, topic_completion_section, content_depth_section, SERP_section, schema_section, flow_patterns, score_model, object_template, audit, workflow, validation, CTA, FAQ
Required passage roles:
orientation, definition, method, example, proof, route, validation, CTA support
Missing passage roles:
none
High risk passage positions:
CTA must not appear before trust and validation sections
Primary internal link positions:
intro, trust section, internal links section, effort section, gain section, SERP section
Proof positions:
trust section, score model, example object, validation checks
CTA position:
after audit and workflow
Recovery path position:
CTA block secondary link to Trust Paths in Topical Maps
Schema supported passages:
FAQ after final approval only
Feedback signal positions:
score model, passage object, audit, CTA
Overall passage order score:
0.82
Release decision:
Ready after final validation
Owner module:
PassageRoleClassifier
Validation status:
Ready for validation
This is MIRENA optimized passage control.

Passage order audit
Use this audit before drafting or revising a page.
1. Define the page role
Ask:
- Is the page a definition page?
- Is it a method page?
- Is it a comparison page?
- Is it a proof page?
- Is it a conversion page?
- Is it a support page?
- Is it a bridge page?
The page role controls the passage pattern.
2. Define user state
Ask:
- Is the user new?
- Is the user skeptical?
- Is the user comparing?
- Is the user ready to act?
- Is the user stuck?
- Is the user returning?
The user state controls proof timing, link placement, and CTA timing.
3. Define the journey stage
Ask:
- Is this page awareness, diagnosis, education, comparison, trust check, action, support, or retention?
The journey stage controls the section order.
4. Assign passage roles
Give every major section one primary role.
Do not leave sections unclassified.
A section with no role is often a weak section.
5. Check the first three passages
The first three passages should:
- confirm the user is in the right place
- answer or frame the entry need
- give a reason to continue
If the first three passages drift, the page loses flow early.
6. Check proof timing
Ask:
- Which claims need proof?
- Is proof close enough?
- Does proof appear before CTA?
- Does proof have a clear internal link?
- Does proof have a return path to action?
Proof should appear before pressure.
7. Check link placement
Ask:
- Does each internal link fit the passage role?
- Is the target page ready?
- Does the anchor explain the next step?
- Does the link appear too early or too late?
- Does the link reduce effort?
Internal links should follow the passage job.
8. Check CTA timing
Ask:
- Has the user received enough clarity?
- Has the user received enough proof?
- Has the main friction been reduced?
- Is the next step clear?
- Is there a recovery path?
A CTA should not interrupt flow.
9. Check summary and route
Ask:
- Does the page close the loop?
- Does it repeat only what is needed?
- Does it give a useful next path?
- Does it avoid adding new ideas at the end?
The ending should route, not reopen the topic.
10. Define feedback signals
Ask:
- Which section should users reach?
- Which link should users click?
- Which proof path should users use?
- Which CTA behavior should be tracked?
- Which site search terms would show a flow gap?
The passage sequence needs validation after publication.

MIRENA module execution map
This page should activate the full passage flow layer.
| MIRENA module | Role in passage order |
|---|---|
| BehavioralTopicalMapSchema | Adds passage role, sequence, flow risk, link position, proof position, and CTA timing fields |
| UserStateClassifier | Defines user state for passage sequence |
| JourneyStageMapper | Maps page and section sequence to journey stage |
| FrictionPointExtractor | Finds friction that should appear before proof, links, or action |
| TrustRequirementMapper | Places proof before trust threshold and CTA |
| EffortScoreEngine | Scores cognitive, navigation, trust, decision, support, and conversion effort by passage |
| BehavioralEdgeWeightingEngine | Adjusts edge weight by link placement and passage role |
| PassageRoleClassifier | Classifies each section and validates sequence |
| NextBestPathRecommender | Chooses the next route based on passage completion |
| BehavioralInternalLinkOptimizer | Places anchors inside the right passage roles |
| InformationGainUserGainScorer | Scores each passage for topic value and user progress |
| UXContentComponentRecommender | Recommends tables, summaries, proof blocks, examples, and route blocks by passage role |
| BehavioralSERPValidationModule | Validates that SERP entry pages answer, orient, and route in the right order |
| BehavioralSchemaAdapter | Holds schema if visible passage order does not support the schema item |
| SatisfactionSignalIngestor | Reads scroll, link, proof, CTA, and component signals by passage |
| BehavioralFeedbackLoopEngine | Revises sequence based on satisfaction patterns |
| ExperimentationVariantManager | Tests proof placement, CTA placement, summary placement, and route blocks |
| BehavioralComplianceAuditGate | Blocks unsupported claims, unsafe schema, or risky CTA flow |
| BehavioralPublishReadinessOrchestrator | Uses passage order score in release decisions |
| CrossAgentBehaviorSyncAdapter | Syncs accepted passage decisions across modules |
| BehavioralValidationTestSuite | Tests passage roles, order, links, proof, CTA, schema, and signal hooks |
| BehavioralAuditDashboard | Shows flow health, sequence risks, owner tasks, and passage level feedback |
This is the MIRENA layer.
The page is not just drafted.
It is sequenced, scored, validated, monitored, and revised.

MIRENA passage workflow
A MIRENA workflow for passage order should run before the first draft.
- Load topical map.
- Load page role.
- Load primary user state.
- Load journey stage.
- Load friction points.
- Load trust requirements.
- Load internal link targets.
- Load user gain and information gain goals.
- Select passage pattern.
- Assign passage roles.
- Place proof.
- Place internal links.
- Place effort reducing components.
- Place CTA and recovery path.
- Add feedback signals.
- Validate sequence.
- Draft section by section.
- Recheck passage order after drafting.
- Publish with monitoring.
- Revise sequence from satisfaction signals.
This prevents the page from becoming a keyword outline with a CTA added later.

Passage validation checks before publication
Before publication, MIRENA should validate:
- Page role is defined.
- Primary user state is defined.
- Journey stage is defined.
- Passage roles are assigned.
- First section answers or frames the entry need.
- Definitions appear before advanced methods.
- Proof appears before trust sensitive CTAs.
- Internal links fit passage roles.
- Anchor text matches passage context.
- Examples appear after concepts they clarify.
- Comparison appears before decision.
- Support appears before users get stuck.
- CTA appears after clarity and trust.
- Recovery path exists.
- Schema matches visible passage support.
- Feedback signals are assigned.
If passage order fails, the page should return to outline revision before final draft.
Passage order release thresholds
MIRENA should use passage order in publish readiness.
| Release condition | Passage order rule |
|---|---|
| Publish ready | Passage order score above 0.70 and no high flow risk |
| Publish with monitoring | Score above 0.60 with feedback signals |
| Revise before publish | Score between 0.40 and 0.60 |
| Hold | Score below 0.40 on strategic page |
| Block CTA | CTA appears before trust support |
| Block schema | Schema does not match visible passage support |
| Test required | Mixed flow signals or high uncertainty |
| Human review | High risk claim appears before proof |
This makes flow a release gate.
Not a style preference.
Passage order experiments
Some sequence decisions should be tested.
MIRENA can route uncertain flow choices to experiments.
Possible tests:
- proof before method vs proof after method
- CTA after model vs CTA after example
- summary before table vs summary after table
- route block early vs route block late
- FAQ in main flow vs FAQ at end
- comparison before proof vs proof before comparison
- example before scoring model vs example after scoring model
- shorter introduction vs stronger orientation
- recovery path beside CTA vs below CTA
Experiments should have guardrails.
A flow test should not improve clicks while reducing trust, satisfaction, support success, or completion.
Passage feedback after publication
Passage order should learn from user behavior.
Useful signals include:
- scroll depth by section
- section drop off
- internal link clicks by passage
- proof path clicks by claim section
- CTA starts after section exposure
- CTA completion after proof exposure
- FAQ use
- table engagement
- site search after section
- return to search after page
- support path use
- feedback about clarity or sequence
These signals help MIRENA revise order.
Examples:
| Signal pattern | Likely decision |
|---|---|
| High drop off before definition | Move direct answer higher |
| High site search for examples | Add example sooner |
| Proof path use before CTA | Move proof closer to CTA |
| CTA click with weak completion | Add trust bridge before CTA |
| Table engagement high | Move table earlier or improve route after it |
| FAQ use high with repeated search | Move answer into main body |
| Internal link ignored | Recheck anchor and placement |
| Link clicked with weak target engagement | Recheck target promise |
| Users skip method but use summary | Add clearer route and compress method |
| Strong scroll to audit section | Promote audit or add template |
This is passage level feedback.
It tells MIRENA which section order worked and which section needs repositioning.
Passage order dashboard
The behavioral audit dashboard should show flow health.
Recommended widgets:
| Widget | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Passage order score | Shows flow quality by page |
| Flow risk table | Lists high risk section orders |
| CTA timing risk | Shows CTAs placed before support |
| Proof timing risk | Shows claims with late proof |
| Link placement health | Shows links by passage role |
| Section drop off | Shows where users leave |
| Passage gain table | Shows information gain and user gain by section |
| Effort by passage | Shows cognitive or trust load by section |
| Experiment queue | Lists sequence tests |
| Owner action queue | Assigns fixes |
This gives editors and SEOs passage level visibility.

Common passage order mistakes
Starting with broad context before the answer
Users need confirmation that the page fits.
Give the answer or frame early.
Defining after using advanced terms
Do not force the user to infer meaning.
Define first, expand after.
Placing proof after the CTA
For skeptical users, proof after the CTA is late.
Bring proof closer to the claim or action.
Linking before the user has a reason
An internal link placed too early can distract.
Let the section create the need first.
Adding comparison after recommendation
Users need criteria before a recommendation.
Comparison should support choice.
Treating FAQ as a keyword dump
FAQ should reduce friction.
If an FAQ answers a core need, move the answer into the body.
Ending with new ideas
The end should summarize and route.
Do not introduce new core concepts in the close.
Using one sequence for every user
Beginners, strategists, skeptics, buyers, and support users need different flows.
MIRENA should sequence by user state.

Signs your page has poor behavioral flow
Use this checklist.
You may need passage order optimization if:
- users leave before reaching the main answer
- users search for terms defined later
- CTA clicks happen but completion is weak
- proof pages are clicked after CTA abandonment
- users skip large sections
- tables get engagement but no next step follows
- FAQ use is high but support search continues
- internal links are visible but not clicked
- the page has strong content but weak continuation
- feedback says the page is confusing
- users loop between related pages
- the summary introduces new concepts
- sections feel correct alone but awkward together
These are flow issues.
The content may be good.
The order may be wrong.
Passage order brief template
Use this before drafting.
Page URL:
Parent cluster:
Parent node:
Page role:
Primary user state:
Secondary user state:
Journey stage:
Entry need:
Primary friction:
Trust requirement:
Effort risk:
Information gain target:
User gain target:
Required passage pattern:
Passage 1 role:
Passage 2 role:
Passage 3 role:
Required proof position:
Required internal link position:
Required example position:
Required comparison position:
CTA position:
Recovery path position:
Schema note:
Feedback signal:
Revision trigger:
Owner module:
This brief gives the writer a behavioral sequence.
Not just headings.
Example passage order brief
Page URL:
/topical-mapping/passage-order-behavioral-flow/
Parent cluster:
Topical Mapping
Parent node:
Behavioral Topical Maps
Page role:
Method page
Primary user state:
Strategist
Secondary user state:
Content lead, MIRENA operator
Journey stage:
Education to validation
Entry need:
Understand how section order changes user progress and SEO page quality
Primary friction:
User may see section order as writing preference instead of architecture
Trust requirement:
Show passage roles, score model, object template, audit, and MIRENA workflow
Effort risk:
High concept density from many connected modules
Information gain target:
Define passage order as a measurable behavioral layer inside topical maps
User gain target:
Help users plan page sections in the right order before drafting
Required passage pattern:
Problem → Definition → Role taxonomy → Sequence models → Scoring → Objects → Audit → Workflow → CTA
Passage 1 role:
Orientation
Passage 2 role:
Definition
Passage 3 role:
Topical map context
Required proof position:
Before CTA, with score model and object examples
Required internal link position:
In sections for trust, effort, links, gain, SERP, and schema
Required example position:
After passage object template
Required comparison position:
In page role and journey stage tables
CTA position:
After audit and workflow
Recovery path position:
Secondary CTA to Trust Paths in Topical Maps
Schema note:
Hold until final FAQ and visible support are approved
Feedback signal:
Scroll to score model, clicks to trust paths page, CTA starts after audit
Revision trigger:
Low scroll to object example or high site search for section order examples
Owner module:
PassageRoleClassifier
Recommended components for this page
| Component | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Passage role table | Defines section jobs |
| User state sequence table | Shows how order changes by user |
| Journey stage sequence table | Connects order to journey |
| Flow pattern blocks | Gives reusable page sequences |
| Passage order score table | Makes the method measurable |
| Passage object template | Makes section state structured |
| Filled passage object | Reduces abstraction |
| Passage sequence object | Shows full page control |
| Audit checklist | Turns the method into a workflow |
| MIRENA module map | Shows system execution |
| CTA support block | Routes ready users into MIRENA planning |
Each component should reduce effort or increase clarity.
No decorative blocks.
Final take
Passage order turns a page from a set of sections into a guided experience.
The same ideas can help or fail depending on sequence.
Definition before method.
Proof before pressure.
Criteria before recommendation.
Support before frustration.
Route after readiness.
CTA after confidence.
That is behavioral flow.
MIRENA should not only decide what a page should include.
It should decide the order users need to receive it.
That order affects effort, trust, user gain, internal links, schema safety, satisfaction, and release readiness.
This is the next layer of behavioral topical mapping.
Not just page architecture.
Passage architecture.
FAQ
What is passage order in SEO content?
Passage order is the planned sequence of sections inside a page. It defines what the user receives first, second, third, and next.
What is behavioral flow?
Behavioral flow is the way page sections move the user from entry to clarity, trust, choice, action, support, or the next page.
How does passage order connect to behavioral topical maps?
Behavioral topical maps define user movement, effort, trust, and feedback. Passage order applies those ideas inside each page.
How does passage order affect internal links?
Internal links work better when placed inside the right passage role. A proof link belongs near a claim. A process link belongs near a method. A recovery link belongs near a CTA.
How does passage order affect trust?
Trust depends on timing. Proof should appear before trust sensitive CTAs. Claims should be supported near the point where users may doubt them.
How does passage order affect effort score?
Poor section order increases cognitive, navigation, trust, decision, and conversion effort. Strong sequence reduces the work users must do to understand and act.
How should MIRENA classify passages?
MIRENA should classify passages by role, such as orientation, definition, method, example, comparison, proof, trust bridge, effort reducer, route, CTA support, action, recovery, support, and feedback.
Can the same page use more than one flow pattern?
Yes. A page can combine patterns, but one pattern should lead. The primary page role and user state should decide the main sequence.
How should passage order be measured after publication?
Track scroll depth by section, section drop off, link clicks by passage, proof path use, CTA starts, CTA completion, FAQ use, site search after page, and feedback about clarity.
When should passage order be planned?
Passage order should be planned before drafting. MIRENA should use page role, user state, journey stage, friction, trust needs, link paths, gain targets, and feedback signals to build the sequence.
