# The 12 Programmatic SEO Playbooks Beyond mixing and matching data point permutations, these are the proven playbooks for programmatic SEO. ## 1. Templates **Pattern**: "[Type] template" or "free [type] template" **Example searches**: "resume template", "invoice template", "pitch deck template" **What it is**: Downloadable or interactive templates users can use directly. **Why it works**: - High intent—people need it now - Shareable/linkable assets - Natural for product-led companies **Value requirements**: - Actually usable templates (not just previews) - Multiple variations per type - Quality comparable to paid options - Easy download/use flow **URL structure**: `/templates/[type]/` or `/templates/[category]/[type]/` --- ## 2. Curation **Pattern**: "best [category]" or "top [number] [things]" **Example searches**: "best website builders", "top 10 crm software", "best free design tools" **What it is**: Curated lists ranking or recommending options in a category. **Why it works**: - Comparison shoppers searching for guidance - High commercial intent - Evergreen with updates **Value requirements**: - Genuine evaluation criteria - Real testing or expertise - Regular updates (date visible) - Not just affiliate-driven rankings **URL structure**: `/best/[category]/` or `/[category]/best/` --- ## 3. Conversions **Pattern**: "[X] to [Y]" or "[amount] [unit] in [unit]" **Example searches**: "$10 USD to GBP", "100 kg to lbs", "pdf to word" **What it is**: Tools or pages that convert between formats, units, or currencies. **Why it works**: - Instant utility - Extremely high search volume - Repeat usage potential **Value requirements**: - Accurate, real-time data - Fast, functional tool - Related conversions suggested - Mobile-friendly interface **URL structure**: `/convert/[from]-to-[to]/` or `/[from]-to-[to]-converter/` --- ## 4. Comparisons **Pattern**: "[X] vs [Y]" or "[X] alternative" **Example searches**: "webflow vs wordpress", "notion vs coda", "figma alternatives" **What it is**: Head-to-head comparisons between products, tools, or options. **Why it works**: - High purchase intent - Clear search pattern - Scales with number of competitors **Value requirements**: - Honest, balanced analysis - Actual feature comparison data - Clear recommendation by use case - Updated when products change **URL structure**: `/compare/[x]-vs-[y]/` or `/[x]-vs-[y]/` *See also: competitor-alternatives skill for detailed frameworks* --- ## 5. Examples **Pattern**: "[type] examples" or "[category] inspiration" **Example searches**: "saas landing page examples", "email subject line examples", "portfolio website examples" **What it is**: Galleries or collections of real-world examples for inspiration. **Why it works**: - Research phase traffic - Highly shareable - Natural for design/creative tools **Value requirements**: - Real, high-quality examples - Screenshots or embeds - Categorization/filtering - Analysis of why they work **URL structure**: `/examples/[type]/` or `/[type]-examples/` --- ## 6. Locations **Pattern**: "[service/thing] in [location]" **Example searches**: "coworking spaces in san diego", "dentists in austin", "best restaurants in brooklyn" **What it is**: Location-specific pages for services, businesses, or information. **Why it works**: - Local intent is massive - Scales with geography - Natural for marketplaces/directories **Value requirements**: - Actual local data (not just city name swapped) - Local providers/options listed - Location-specific insights (pricing, regulations) - Map integration helpful **URL structure**: `/[service]/[city]/` or `/locations/[city]/[service]/` --- ## 7. Personas **Pattern**: "[product] for [audience]" or "[solution] for [role/industry]" **Example searches**: "payroll software for agencies", "crm for real estate", "project management for freelancers" **What it is**: Tailored landing pages addressing specific audience segments. **Why it works**: - Speaks directly to searcher's context - Higher conversion than generic pages - Scales with personas **Value requirements**: - Genuine persona-specific content - Relevant features highlighted - Testimonials from that segment - Use cases specific to audience **URL structure**: `/for/[persona]/` or `/solutions/[industry]/` --- ## 8. Integrations **Pattern**: "[your product] [other product] integration" or "[product] + [product]" **Example searches**: "slack asana integration", "zapier airtable", "hubspot salesforce sync" **What it is**: Pages explaining how your product works with other tools. **Why it works**: - Captures users of other products - High intent (they want the solution) - Scales with integration ecosystem **Value requirements**: - Real integration details - Setup instructions - Use cases for the combination - Working integration (not vaporware) **URL structure**: `/integrations/[product]/` or `/connect/[product]/` --- ## 9. Glossary **Pattern**: "what is [term]" or "[term] definition" or "[term] meaning" **Example searches**: "what is pSEO", "api definition", "what does crm stand for" **What it is**: Educational definitions of industry terms and concepts. **Why it works**: - Top-of-funnel awareness - Establishes expertise - Natural internal linking opportunities **Value requirements**: - Clear, accurate definitions - Examples and context - Related terms linked - More depth than a dictionary **URL structure**: `/glossary/[term]/` or `/learn/[term]/` --- ## 10. Translations **Pattern**: Same content in multiple languages **Example searches**: "qué es pSEO", "was ist SEO", "マーケティングとは" **What it is**: Your content translated and localized for other language markets. **Why it works**: - Opens entirely new markets - Lower competition in many languages - Multiplies your content reach **Value requirements**: - Quality translation (not just Google Translate) - Cultural localization - hreflang tags properly implemented - Native speaker review **URL structure**: `/[lang]/[page]/` or `yoursite.com/es/`, `/de/`, etc. --- ## 11. Directory **Pattern**: "[category] tools" or "[type] software" or "[category] companies" **Example searches**: "ai copywriting tools", "email marketing software", "crm companies" **What it is**: Comprehensive directories listing options in a category. **Why it works**: - Research phase capture - Link building magnet - Natural for aggregators/reviewers **Value requirements**: - Comprehensive coverage - Useful filtering/sorting - Details per listing (not just names) - Regular updates **URL structure**: `/directory/[category]/` or `/[category]-directory/` --- ## 12. Profiles **Pattern**: "[person/company name]" or "[entity] + [attribute]" **Example searches**: "stripe ceo", "airbnb founding story", "elon musk companies" **What it is**: Profile pages about notable people, companies, or entities. **Why it works**: - Informational intent traffic - Builds topical authority - Natural for B2B, news, research **Value requirements**: - Accurate, sourced information - Regularly updated - Unique insights or aggregation - Not just Wikipedia rehash **URL structure**: `/people/[name]/` or `/companies/[name]/` --- ## Choosing Your Playbook ### Match to Your Assets | If you have... | Consider... | |----------------|-------------| | Proprietary data | Stats, Directories, Profiles | | Product with integrations | Integrations | | Design/creative product | Templates, Examples | | Multi-segment audience | Personas | | Local presence | Locations | | Tool or utility product | Conversions | | Content/expertise | Glossary, Curation | | International potential | Translations | | Competitor landscape | Comparisons | ### Combine Playbooks You can layer multiple playbooks: - **Locations + Personas**: "Marketing agencies for startups in Austin" - **Curation + Locations**: "Best coworking spaces in San Diego" - **Integrations + Personas**: "Slack for sales teams" - **Glossary + Translations**: Multi-language educational content