Today we shipped a new landing page for 24picture: an AI Cyberpunk Generator.
Link:
https://24picture.com/ai-cyberpunk-generator.html
The goal was simple: keep building SEO-focused use-case pages around high-intent image generation queries, while making sure each page is still genuinely useful to users.
Instead of publishing a thin “keyword page”, we built a full landing page with:
- a clear product-focused headline
- prompt examples for cyberpunk scenes
- use cases like wallpapers, thumbnails, album covers, and concept art
- FAQ schema for richer search visibility
- internal links from the homepage, create page, and core generator page
- sitemap updates for faster discovery
The keyword angle here is AI cyberpunk generator, but the real intent behind it is broader:
people want to generate neon cityscapes, android portraits, rainy dystopian streets, cyberpunk anime, and futuristic wallpaper-style visuals without needing Photoshop or 3D tools.
So the page was written to serve both:
- search engines
- real users looking for inspiration and prompts
A few things I’m learning while building 24picture in public:
1. Programmatic SEO works better when the page is actually helpful
It’s easy to mass-produce pages with swapped keywords.
It’s much harder — and much more worthwhile — to create pages that genuinely help someone get a better result.
For this one, that meant including prompt structure, style keywords, and realistic use cases instead of just repeating the target phrase.
2. Internal linking matters more than people think
We didn’t just publish the page and leave it isolated.
We also linked it from:
- the homepage footer
- the create page
- the main text-to-image page
- the sitemap
That gives both users and crawlers a better path to find it.
3. Shipping small pages consistently is better than waiting for “perfect”
This wasn’t a massive feature launch.
It was one focused page, shipped fast, tied to a clear keyword and a clear user intent.
That’s the kind of compounding work we’re trying to do with 24picture.
Next up: more landing pages, more comparison pages, and more experiments around AI image search intent.
If you’re also building SEO pages for an indie product, I’d love to hear how you balance search intent vs actual usefulness.
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