jtob-template-seo-engine

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A framework for scaling organic growth by mapping high-intent search queries to specific "Jobs-to-be-Done" (JTBD) and delivering immediate value through templates. Use this when your product serves multiple distinct use cases or when you want to transition from generic SEO to a conversion-focused acquisition engine.

samarv By samarv schedule Updated 1/25/2026

name: jtob-template-seo-engine description: A framework for scaling organic growth by mapping high-intent search queries to specific "Jobs-to-be-Done" (JTBD) and delivering immediate value through templates. Use this when your product serves multiple distinct use cases or when you want to transition from generic SEO to a conversion-focused acquisition engine.

Overview

Canva’s growth was driven by a "Product-Led SEO" strategy that focuses on the end-to-end user experience rather than just technical search rankings. This framework moves users from a Google search query directly into a "magic moment" within the product, minimizing friction and maximizing immediate utility.

The 4-Step Growth Engine

1. Identify "Job-to-be-Done" (JTBD) Clusters

Identify the specific tasks users are trying to accomplish. Do not target keywords; target motivations.

  • Analyze Search Intent: Look for "How to make [X]" or "[X] creator" queries.
  • Segment by Persona: Group these tasks by the people doing them (e.g., Social Media Managers needing square graphics vs. Teachers needing posters).
  • Identify the "Emotive Spark": Use user testing to find which tasks trigger the most delight or relief when completed.

2. Build the Intent-to-Product Bridge

Create landing pages that serve as a functional gateway, not just marketing copy.

  • The Landing Experience: When a user searches for a "Halloween Poster," the landing page must show exactly how the product solves that specific problem.
  • Visual Proof: Display actual templates on the landing page so the user sees the quality before signing up.
  • The Direct Entry Point: Include a prominent CTA that drops the user directly into a pre-loaded template related to their search (e.g., "Edit this Halloween Poster").

3. Implement "Micro-Step" Onboarding (The Monkey Search)

Once the user is in the product, prevent "blank page syndrome" by forcing immediate, low-stakes interaction.

  • Lower the Barrier: Give the user a simple, surprising task to build momentum.
  • The "Monkey" Technique: Instead of a complex tutorial, ask the user to do something easy and fun (e.g., "Search for an image of a monkey and drag it onto the page").
  • Iterative Success: Guide the user through 3-4 steps that result in a finished (or near-finished) design within 60 seconds.
  • The Validation Goal: Aim for the user to say/think: "I didn't know I could do this myself."

4. Aggressive Internationalization

Scale the engine by moving into non-English markets early to capture "blue ocean" search volume.

  • Localize the Job: Understand that a user in Brazil might use the product for different business needs (e.g., running a full business via mobile/WhatsApp) than a user in the US.
  • Velocity over Perfection: Set ambitious goals for language support (e.g., moving from 5 to 100 languages in a single year) to dominate local SEO before competitors arrive.

Examples

Example 1: The Seasonal Marketer

  • Context: A small business owner needs to promote a flash sale for "Pi Day."
  • Search Intent: "Pi Day social media post template."
  • Application: The user lands on a dedicated Pi Day page showing 20+ templates. Clicking one opens the Canva editor with that specific template loaded and a "Replace text" coach mark active.
  • Output: The user changes the discount code, downloads the file, and experiences a "magic moment" in under 2 minutes.

Example 2: The Brazilian Mobile Entrepreneur

  • Context: A local artisan in São Paulo wants to create a price list for WhatsApp.
  • Search Intent: "Lista de preços para WhatsApp."
  • Application: The user finds a localized Portuguese landing page. The onboarding focuses on the Android app experience, specifically showing how to share the final design directly to WhatsApp.
  • Output: The artisan creates a professional-looking price list on their phone, solving a critical business need without a desktop computer.

Common Pitfalls

  • Optimizing for Traffic, Not Conversion: Ranking #1 for a term is useless if the landing page doesn't lead to a successful product action. Ensure the "Bridge" to the editor is seamless.
  • The Blank Page: Dropping a user into an empty workspace after they searched for something specific. Always provide a relevant template starting point.
  • Ignoring the "Joy" Bar: Launching an MVP that is functional but "crappy." If the user doesn't feel a spark of delight during the first interaction, they won't become an organic advocate.
  • Thinking US-First: Waiting too long to internationalize. Non-English markets often have lower SEO difficulty and higher growth potential for utility-based products.
Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/samarv/Shanon --skill jtob-template-seo-engine
Repository Details
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