home / skills / wdavidturner / product-skills / product-led-seo
This skill helps assess and implement product-led SEO, treating SEO as a product and aligning with growth, strategy, and ROI.
npx playbooks add skill wdavidturner/product-skills --skill product-led-seoReview the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.
---
name: product-led-seo
description: Use when asked to "product-led SEO", "programmatic SEO", "build programmatic pages", "organic acquisition for product", "decide if SEO is worth it", or "optimize for AI search". Helps evaluate whether SEO fits your business model and how to approach it as a product, not just marketing. The Product-Led SEO framework (created by Eli Schwartz) treats SEO as building products for search users.
---
# Product-Led SEO
## What It Is
Product-Led SEO is a framework that treats SEO as a product discipline, not just a marketing tactic. The core insight: **SEO success comes from building products that serve searcher intent, not from creating content optimized for keywords.**
The traditional approach to SEO is "find keywords, write content, build links." Product-Led SEO asks: "What is the user searching for, and what product experience will satisfy that search?"
This framework was developed by Eli Schwartz, who helped companies like Zapier, Tinder, Quora, and SurveyMonkey build SEO strategies that generated hundreds of millions in revenue. The key shift: Move from "How do we rank for this keyword?" to "What product does this searcher need?"
## When to Use It
Use Product-Led SEO when you need to:
- **Decide if SEO is worth investing in** for your business model
- **Develop an SEO strategy** that actually converts (not just drives traffic)
- **Build programmatic pages** at scale (like Zapier, Zillow, or TripAdvisor)
- **Evaluate your SEO approach** in the age of AI Overviews and LLMs
- **Shift from top-of-funnel content** to mid-funnel conversion
- **Get product and marketing aligned** on search strategy
- **Understand the real ROI** of your SEO investment
## When Not to Use It
- **No SEO journey exists**: If users don't search for your solution (most B2B SaaS), SEO may not be the right channel
- **Committee decisions**: Enterprise sales with long buying cycles rarely convert from SEO
- **Brand-driven discovery**: If your product requires brand awareness first, invest in brand, not SEO
- **You need fast results**: SEO takes months to years; if you need revenue now, look elsewhere
- **Local businesses with no online transaction**: A pizza shop may not need a website at all
## Patterns
Detailed examples showing how to apply Product-Led SEO correctly. Each pattern shows a common mistake and the correct approach.
### Critical (get these wrong and you've wasted your time)
| Pattern | What It Teaches |
|---------|-----------------|
| [no-seo-journey](patterns/no-seo-journey.md) | Not every business should do SEO — validate the user journey first |
| [traffic-not-conversion](patterns/traffic-not-conversion.md) | Traffic is vanity — only measure what matters to the business |
| [blog-for-blog-sake](patterns/blog-for-blog-sake.md) | Content that doesn't convert is waste, not strategy |
| [copying-competitors-programmatic](patterns/copying-competitors-programmatic.md) | Zapier's strategy only works if you have Zapier's use case |
| [top-funnel-trap](patterns/top-funnel-trap.md) | AI Overviews will eat your top-of-funnel — move to mid-funnel |
### High Impact
| Pattern | What It Teaches |
|---------|-----------------|
| [seo-as-product](patterns/seo-as-product.md) | SEO pages need PM, design, and engineering — not just writers |
| [programmatic-without-use-case](patterns/programmatic-without-use-case.md) | Scale creates nothing if no one searches for what you built |
| [ranking-as-kpi](patterns/ranking-as-kpi.md) | Rankings don't pay bills — measure business outcomes |
| [wrong-funnel-position](patterns/wrong-funnel-position.md) | Match your SEO to where intent exists in the buyer journey |
| [link-building-vs-brand-building](patterns/link-building-vs-brand-building.md) | Guest posts on low-authority sites are waste — build brand instead |
| [ai-content-as-strategy](patterns/ai-content-as-strategy.md) | AI can assist content, but AI-only content is just faster spam |
### Medium Impact
| Pattern | What It Teaches |
|---------|-----------------|
| [technical-seo-overkill](patterns/technical-seo-overkill.md) | 100-page sites don't need enterprise-level technical SEO |
| [keyword-tool-truth](patterns/keyword-tool-truth.md) | Keyword tools are directional, not truth — they can be 10x off |
| [aeo-citation-strategy](patterns/aeo-citation-strategy.md) | In AI search, showing up as a brand beats showing up as a link |
## Deep Dives
Read only when you need extra detail.
- `references/product-led-seo-playbook.md`: Expanded framework detail, checklists, and examples.
## Resources
**Books:**
- *Product-Led SEO* by Eli Schwartz — the foundational framework
**Podcasts:**
- Lenny's Podcast: Eli Schwartz episode on Product-Led SEO
- Lenny's Podcast: Ethan Smith episode on AEO and AI search
**Other:**
- Eli Schwartz's newsletter at productledseo.com
- Graphite's research on AEO at graphite.io
This skill helps teams decide when and how to treat SEO as a product discipline rather than a marketing channel. It applies the Product-Led SEO framework to evaluate search-driven opportunities, design programmatic pages, and align product, design, and engineering around searcher intent. Use it to determine ROI, prioritize efforts, and build search experiences that convert, not just rank.
The skill analyzes the business model, user search journeys, and intent signals to identify whether SEO can drive meaningful acquisition and revenue. It recommends concrete product experiences or programmatic page designs that satisfy specific queries and maps KPI-driven experiments to validate assumptions. It flags common mistakes—like chasing traffic without conversion—and gives a prioritized plan for execution across product and marketing teams.
Is Product-Led SEO the same as traditional keyword SEO?
No. Product-Led SEO focuses on building product experiences that satisfy search intent and drive conversions, whereas traditional SEO often centers on keywords, content volume, and backlinks.
How quickly will this produce results?
SEO driven by product changes typically takes months to show maturation; use small experiments and measurable KPIs to validate before scaling.