Skip to content

SEO Pages #9

@cdsmith16

Description

@cdsmith16

Create SEO Pages

and extensible components matching the top cards and scenario use cases for organic acquisition:

Card List

  • Amex (Resy)
    -- Amex Platinum Card – $400 Resy Credit ($200 semi-annual)
    -- Amex Gold Card – $120 Dining Credit (monthly, includes Resy)
    -- Amex Green Card – $100 LoungeBuddy Credit (not Resy, but often mentioned alongside)
  • Chase (OpenTable)
    -- Chase Sapphire Reserve – $300 Dining Credit ($150 semi-annual)
    -- Chase Sapphire Preferred – Not OpenTable specific, but has dining point multipliers
    -- Chase Freedom Flex – No dining credit but 3% dining category (often confused)

The first 3 ReserveMap SEO pages

Resy Restaurants with Amex Benefits in NYC (Pre-Filtered Map)

/resy-restaurants-amex-benefits-nyc
*/amex-gold-dining-credit-nyc *
/amex-platinum-restaurants-nyc

SEO Searches to Solve for

Perfect question. This is exactly the right way to think about your SEO pages: real phrases people already type when they’re confused or mid-decision.

Below is a structured list of search scenarios / phrases you can explicitly design pages to answer. I’ll group them by intent, because that matters more than keywords.

I’ll write them in human language, not SEO-spam language — because that’s what you’re actually optimizing for.


1. Core “Does this credit work here?” searches

(highest intent, highest value)

These are people who already have the card and are trying to not waste a benefit.

  • CSR dining credit NYC

  • Chase Sapphire Reserve dining credit restaurants

  • CSR OpenTable restaurants NYC

  • Chase dining credit where can I use it

  • Chase Sapphire Reserve restaurant list

  • Amex Gold dining credit NYC

  • Amex Gold restaurants that qualify

  • Amex Gold dining credit where does it work

  • Amex Gold Resy restaurants NYC

  • Amex Platinum Resy credit NYC

  • Amex Platinum restaurants that trigger Resy credit

  • Resy Amex Platinum eligible restaurants

  • Amex Platinum dining credit restaurants NYC

💡 These are your bread-and-butter pages.
One card × one city × one benefit = one page.


2. “List + map” intent (people want visualization)

These users aren’t just asking if — they’re asking where.

  • CSR dining credit map
  • Chase Sapphire Reserve restaurant map
  • Amex Gold dining credit map NYC
  • Resy restaurants map NYC
  • OpenTable Chase Sapphire Reserve map

These are perfect ReserveMap pages because:

  • Google can index them
  • LinkedIn previews make immediate sense
  • Maps are the obvious best answer

3. “Resy vs OpenTable” confusion searches

(great for authority + trust)

These are people trying to understand networks, not just cards.

  • Resy restaurants Amex
  • OpenTable Chase Sapphire Reserve
  • Resy vs OpenTable Amex
  • Which restaurants use Resy Amex
  • Does Amex work with OpenTable

You can solve these with:

“Here’s how the networks work, and here’s a map so you don’t have to think about it.”


4. Edge-case & rules clarification searches

(lower volume, high credibility)

These are deeply confused but motivated users.

  • Does delivery count for Amex Gold dining credit
  • Does takeout count for CSR dining credit
  • Resy credit in person vs online
  • OpenTable reservation required Chase dining credit
  • Why didn’t my Amex dining credit post

These work best as:

  • supporting sections below the map
  • or a dedicated “How it works” page linked from all maps

They’re SEO fuel and trust builders.


5. City-specific expansion patterns

(same intent, infinite scale)

Once NYC works, these phrases repeat cleanly:

  • CSR dining credit San Francisco
  • Amex Gold dining credit Los Angeles
  • Resy restaurants Chicago
  • Chase Sapphire Reserve restaurants Miami
  • Amex Platinum Resy credit Austin

This is where template + data + programmatic discipline pays off.


6. “Best restaurants” framing

(LinkedIn-friendly, discovery-oriented)

These aren’t panic searches — they’re planning searches.

  • Best restaurants to use Amex Gold credit NYC
  • Best CSR dining credit restaurants
  • Best Resy restaurants Amex
  • Where to use Chase dining credit

These pages:

  • feel editorial, not transactional
  • do very well when shared
  • position you as tasteful, not utilitarian

7. Comparison & decision-making searches

(future monetization gold)

These users are deciding between cards.

  • Amex Gold vs Chase Sapphire Reserve dining
  • Best card for dining NYC
  • Which credit card has the best restaurant benefits
  • Amex Resy vs Chase OpenTable

You don’t need these now — but your existing pages become the raw material for them later.


8. Your “index” / guide pages (meta-SEO)

These aren’t single answers — they help users explore.

  • NYC credit card dining benefits
  • Restaurant reservation credit cards
  • Credit card dining perks map
  • Dining credits by credit card

These pages should mostly link out to your specific maps.


How to think about this structurally (important)

Each SEO page should answer one sentence:

“Where can I use [card + benefit] in [city]?”

If a phrase naturally fits that sentence, it’s a valid page.

Metadata

Metadata

Assignees

No one assigned

    Labels

    No labels
    No labels

    Projects

    No projects

    Milestone

    No milestone

    Relationships

    None yet

    Development

    No branches or pull requests

    Issue actions