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Running a business is tough, especially with so many competitors. So the key question becomes: how does one acquire customers cheaply?
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Programmatic SEO involves using automation and templates to create large numbers of optimized pages quickly, rather than crafting each page manually. Many companies have leveraged this strategy to capture massive organic traffic. Below are some real-world examples of businesses successfully using programmatic SEO – we’ll see how they implemented it and the results they achieved.
TripAdvisor is a master of programmatic SEO, with a page dedicated to nearly every city in the world. Each city page follows a consistent template that pulls data from TripAdvisor’s huge travel database. These pages typically include:
Instead of manually writing a guide for each city, TripAdvisor’s system populates these pages automatically with up-to-date information. This ensures every destination—from major hubs to small towns—has an informative page optimized for search queries like “best restaurants in [City]” or “top attractions in [City]”.
Results: By covering millions of long-tail location-based keywords with useful content, TripAdvisor dominates travel search results. Their programmatic approach means they appear for virtually any city-related travel query, capturing huge amounts of organic traffic and connecting travelers with relevant listings. This broad reach would be impossible to achieve efficiently with traditional manual content creation.
Zapier, a popular automation tool, uses programmatic SEO to target thousands of “Tool A + Tool B integration” searches. The company integrates with over 5,000 apps, and it has created 50,000+ unique landing pages – one for each pair of apps you can connect. For example, Zapier has pages like “Connect Slack to Google Drive” or “Shopify and Mailchimp integration,” each optimized for those specific search terms.
Each integration page follows a predefined structure that includes:
Zapier’s programmatic system automatically populates these pages with the app names, descriptions, and how-to content, ensuring they are relevant to the integration query. They also include strong calls-to-action (CTAs) throughout, encouraging visitors to sign up for Zapier once they see how it can solve their need.
Results: This strategy has made Zapier ubiquitous on Google for integration-related searches. If you search any common software combination, chances are Zapier’s page is on page one. According to Ubersuggest, Zapier’s programmatic pages help attract over 16.2 million organic visitors and rank for about 1.3 million keywords – an enormous reach achieved with relatively modest content effort per page. Crucially, those visitors are highly qualified (searching for a specific integration), which means Zapier’s conversion rate on these pages is high (lots of sign-ups for the service).
Canva, the graphic design platform, has grown its traffic by creating hundreds of landing pages for design templates. Every time people search for a specific kind of template (like a “free Christmas card template” or “business card template”), Canva likely has a dedicated page for it. Each of these pages is generated from a template (fittingly!) and filled with dynamic content:
By programmatically producing pages for every niche template query, Canva ensures that when someone searches for a specific design need, they’ll find a Canva page offering that template. All these pages follow a consistent layout, but each targets a different long-tail keyword.
Results: With thousands of these keyword-targeted pages, Canva dominates the search results for template-related queries, pulling in a highly relevant audience looking for designs. Once visitors land on a Canva template page, they’re prompted to start designing with that template (by signing up). This strategy drives a steady flow of new users. Canva’s growth into a go-to design tool is partly due to this broad organic visibility achieved through programmatic SEO.
Atlassian, the company behind tools like Jira and Confluence, uses programmatic SEO to capture search traffic from specific use cases and industry queries. For example, many people search for how Jira can be used for different project management needs. In response, Atlassian created dedicated pages like “Jira for Agile Project Management,” “Jira for Requirements Management,” and “Jira for Incident Management.” Each page is built from a template and filled with content about using Jira for that particular purpose.
These landing pages typically include:
By covering numerous long-tail keywords related to Jira and its applications, Atlassian ensures they rank at the top for those specific queries. For instance, when someone searches something like “best tool for agile bug tracking” or similar, Atlassian’s tailored page for that context will appear and explain why Jira is suitable.
Results: This programmatic approach drives more high-intent visitors to Atlassian’s site – people who are actively looking for solutions like theirs. Because the content speaks directly to specific needs (e.g., agile teams, IT incident managers, etc.), these visitors are more likely to sign up for trials or demos. Atlassian effectively turns searchers into leads by consistently ranking for niche, use-case-specific keywords that generic competitors might not cover. The payoff is a stream of qualified traffic and ultimately higher-quality leads coming in at scale.
Each of these examples shows how programmatic SEO can be a game-changer for organic growth. By identifying patterns in search demand and using databases or templates to create pages for each variation of a user query, companies can capture traffic that would be impractical to get through manual content creation alone. The key is to ensure each page provides real value (unique information or functionality) despite being automatically generated – as seen above, the most successful implementations solve a specific problem or answer a specific query for the user. When done right, programmatic SEO can deliver millions of visitors and significant business results with relatively small incremental effort per page.
Today, I used SEOmatic for the first time.
It was user-friendly and efficiently generated 75 unique web pages using keywords and pre-written excerpts.
Total time cost for research & publishing was ≈ 3h (Instead of ≈12h)
Ben Farley
SaaS Founder, Salespitch
Add 10 pages to your site every week. Or 1,000 or 1,000,000.