SEO Value: What It Costs and What It’s Worth
SEO value is the commercial return a business generates from organic search visibility, measured against the cost of achieving and maintaining that visibility. It encompasses revenue from organic traffic, the long-term compounding of content assets, and the reduced cost of customer acquisition compared to paid channels over time.
But that definition, clean as it is, hides a more complicated reality. Most businesses either overstate what SEO delivers or undercount it entirely, and both errors lead to bad investment decisions.
Key Takeaways
- SEO value compounds over time in a way paid media cannot. Content built today can generate returns for three to five years without additional spend.
- The biggest mistake in measuring SEO value is treating all organic traffic as equal. Volume without commercial intent is a vanity metric, not a business asset.
- SEO is not free. Accurate valuation requires accounting for content production, technical maintenance, link acquisition, and the opportunity cost of time.
- The comparison that matters is not SEO versus paid search. It is the blended cost of acquisition across your full channel mix, and where SEO fits in that picture.
- Demand creation and demand capture are different things. SEO can do both, but most programmes are built only to capture existing intent, which limits their ceiling.
In This Article
I spent years running agency P&Ls where SEO was one of several channels competing for client budget. The conversations about value were rarely straightforward. A client would see strong organic traffic and assume the channel was performing. Another would see modest traffic numbers and consider pulling investment. Neither read was necessarily right. The question was never just “how much traffic is SEO driving?” It was “what is that traffic worth, what would it cost to replace it, and what would it cost to grow it?” Those are three different questions, and most businesses only ask the first one.
Why Most SEO Valuations Are Wrong
The standard method for calculating SEO value is to take organic traffic, apply an estimated cost-per-click from paid search, and call that the equivalent media value. If you are getting 50,000 visits a month from organic search and the average CPC for those keywords is £2, the logic goes that you are saving £100,000 a month in paid media costs.
This is not a useless exercise. It gives you a rough floor. But it has two serious problems.
First, it assumes that organic and paid traffic are interchangeable, which they are not. Paid traffic is controllable, immediate, and scalable on demand. Organic traffic is earned, slow to build, and cannot be turned up quickly when you need it. They serve different roles in a marketing system, and pricing one as a substitute for the other distorts both.
Second, it treats all organic traffic as equally valuable, which is almost never true. I have seen accounts with hundreds of thousands of monthly organic visits generating almost no revenue, because the content was optimised for informational queries that had no commercial pathway. Traffic to a “what is X” article from someone who will never be a customer has a value close to zero, regardless of what the equivalent CPC might be.
If you want a number that means something, you need to segment your organic traffic by intent and map it to actual conversion data. That means connecting your search analytics to your CRM or revenue data, not just sitting inside Google Search Console looking at impressions.
For a broader framework on how SEO fits into a full acquisition strategy, the Complete SEO Strategy hub covers the mechanics from keyword research through to measurement in a way that connects to commercial outcomes rather than just rankings.
The Real Cost of SEO
One of the most persistent myths in marketing is that SEO is free. It is not. It is just a different cost structure to paid media, and one that is often less visible on a budget sheet.
The costs of an SEO programme include: content production (research, writing, editing, publishing), technical work (site audits, crawl fixes, Core Web Vitals, structured data), link acquisition (outreach, digital PR, content that earns links), and internal time for strategy, reporting, and coordination. If you are using an agency, there is a retainer on top of all of that.
When I was growing the agency from around 20 people to over 100, one of the things that became clear as we scaled SEO as a service was how often clients had been sold a retainer without a clear breakdown of what that retainer was actually buying. Hours? Output? Rankings? The lack of clarity made it almost impossible to have an honest conversation about value. You cannot assess return on investment if you cannot see the investment clearly.
A reasonable SEO programme for a mid-market business might cost £5,000 to £15,000 a month all-in when you account for agency fees, content production, and technical resource. That is £60,000 to £180,000 a year. Against what return? That is the question that needs an honest answer before you can say whether SEO is worth it for your business.
Tools like keyword labelling in Moz can help you segment your keyword universe by commercial intent, which is a practical first step toward understanding which parts of your SEO programme are actually driving value and which are producing traffic that looks good in a report but does nothing for the business.
The Compounding Argument: Where SEO Value Actually Lives
The strongest case for SEO is not the immediate return. It is the compounding return over time. A piece of content that ranks well today can generate leads and revenue for years without additional spend. Paid media stops the moment you stop paying. Organic search does not work that way.
I have seen content assets on client sites that were three or four years old, still ranking in position one or two for commercially valuable terms, still driving qualified traffic every month. The cost of producing that content had long since been absorbed. The return was essentially ongoing margin. That is a fundamentally different value proposition to a paid search campaign that charges you for every single click, indefinitely.
This compounding dynamic is what makes SEO genuinely interesting from a commercial standpoint. But it also makes it harder to justify in the short term, particularly in businesses that are managed to quarterly targets. The value accrues slowly, then all at once, which is the opposite of how most finance teams want to see returns land.
The honest framing for a CFO or a board is this: SEO is a long-duration asset, not a short-duration campaign. You are building something that will be worth more in three years than it is today, assuming it is maintained and developed. If your planning horizon is six months, SEO is the wrong primary channel. If you are thinking in years, it is one of the most capital-efficient acquisition channels available.
Demand Capture Versus Demand Creation in SEO
Most SEO programmes are built almost entirely around demand capture: ranking for terms that people are already searching for, intercepting existing intent, converting it. That is sensible and it works. But it has a ceiling, because it is limited by the size of the existing search market.
Earlier in my career I overvalued lower-funnel performance for similar reasons. It is measurable, attributable, and it converts. The problem is that much of what gets credited to demand capture would have happened anyway. The person searching for your brand name was probably going to find you. The person searching for a specific product you sell was already in the market. You captured them, but you did not create them.
Growth requires reaching people who are not yet in the market. Forrester has written about this gap between demand creation capability and demand capture capability, and it is real. Most businesses are far better at the latter than the former, and their SEO programmes reflect that bias.
SEO can contribute to demand creation through content that reaches people earlier in their thinking, before they have formed a purchase intent. A well-ranked piece of educational content can introduce a brand, frame a problem, and begin building familiarity that eventually converts. This is harder to measure than bottom-of-funnel SEO, which is partly why it gets less investment. But the value is real, even when it is not immediately visible in a last-click attribution model.
The analogy I come back to is retail. Someone who tries on a piece of clothing is far more likely to buy it than someone who just browses the rail. SEO content that genuinely engages a reader, that answers a real question and builds a relationship with a brand, is the equivalent of getting someone into the fitting room. It does not guarantee a sale, but it changes the probability meaningfully.
How to Build an Honest SEO Value Case
If you are trying to assess the value of your current SEO programme, or build a business case for investment, here is how I would approach it.
Start by segmenting your organic traffic by intent. Informational, navigational, and transactional queries have very different commercial values. A tool like Moz can help you understand where your SEO programme sits relative to where the industry is heading, but the segmentation work has to happen in your own data, not in a benchmark report.
Then connect organic traffic to actual revenue outcomes. This requires integrating your analytics with your CRM or e-commerce data. If you cannot do this directly, use conversion rate data by landing page to estimate the revenue contribution of organic traffic to each page type. It will not be perfect, but it will be directionally honest.
Next, calculate your true cost of SEO. Include agency fees, internal time, content production, and any tools or technology you are using. Divide revenue attributed to organic search by total SEO cost to get a rough return on investment figure. If you cannot do this calculation, you do not have enough information to make a sound investment decision.
Finally, model the compounding scenario. If your current organic traffic is generating X in revenue at a cost of Y, what does that look like in year two and year three if the programme continues? What would it cost to generate the same revenue through paid channels over the same period? That comparison is where the real value argument for SEO lives.
Long-form content that genuinely answers a question tends to outperform thin content on both ranking and conversion. The case for long copy is well established in direct response, and it applies to organic search content too. Depth signals authority, and authority converts.
Where SEO Value Gets Inflated
It would be dishonest to make a case for SEO value without also pointing out where that value gets overstated.
Brand search is the most common source of inflation. Organic traffic to branded terms, people searching for your company name or your products by name, is often counted as SEO performance when it is really the result of brand awareness built through other channels. If you run a television campaign and see a spike in branded organic search the following week, that is not an SEO win. It is a brand win. Conflating the two overstates SEO’s contribution and understates the value of brand-building activity.
Direct navigation that gets misclassified as organic is another issue. Depending on how your analytics are configured, some direct traffic can be attributed to organic search. This is a measurement artefact, not a real SEO outcome.
I judged the Effie Awards for several years, which gave me a useful lens on how marketing effectiveness gets framed and sometimes inflated. The entries that impressed me most were the ones that were honest about what drove what. The ones that did not were usually trying to claim credit for outcomes that had multiple contributing factors. SEO reporting often has the same problem. Attribution is genuinely hard, and the response to hard attribution should be honest approximation, not false precision.
The BCG research on how consumers engage with brands across channels is a useful reminder that purchase decisions rarely happen in a single channel. Organic search is one touchpoint in a longer sequence. Treating it as the only touchpoint that matters distorts your understanding of how your customers actually behave.
SEO Value in Different Business Models
SEO value is not uniform across business types. The economics look very different depending on your model, your average order value, your sales cycle, and how your customers search.
For e-commerce businesses with high transaction volume and relatively short purchase cycles, SEO can be a primary acquisition channel with a clear and measurable return. The path from search to purchase is short enough to track reliably, and the volume of transactions gives you enough data to make confident decisions.
For B2B businesses with long sales cycles and multiple decision-makers, SEO value is harder to measure but not smaller. A senior buyer who first encounters your brand through an organic search result, reads three articles, and then enters a six-month sales process is not easy to track back to that first touchpoint. But the value of that first touchpoint is real. The measurement problem is not the same as a value problem.
For local businesses, SEO value is concentrated in a smaller set of high-intent queries with strong geographic signals. The volume is lower but the conversion rates are often higher, because someone searching for a plumber in a specific city is usually ready to make a decision. The economics work differently but they can work very well.
For content businesses, SEO is often the primary distribution channel, and its value is measured in audience size, engagement, and the advertising or subscription revenue that follows. The relationship between content creation and audience building is one that applies across formats, and organic search is a core part of how content finds its audience at scale.
The full picture of how SEO fits into a commercial strategy, from technical foundations through to content and measurement, is something I cover in depth in the Complete SEO Strategy hub. If you are building or rebuilding an SEO programme and want a framework that connects to business outcomes rather than just rankings, that is the place to start.
The Honest Verdict on SEO Value
SEO is worth investing in for most businesses. The compounding economics are genuinely attractive, the cost of customer acquisition tends to improve over time rather than deteriorate, and the assets you build have a durability that paid media cannot match.
But it is not a cheap channel, it is not a fast channel, and it is not a channel that rewards vague strategy or poor measurement. The businesses that get the most from SEO are the ones that treat it with the same commercial rigour they would apply to any other significant investment: clear objectives, honest cost accounting, realistic timelines, and measurement that connects to revenue rather than just traffic.
The ones that get the least from it are usually the ones that bought into the myth that SEO is free, assumed that rankings equal revenue, and never built the measurement infrastructure to know whether any of it was actually working.
Forrester’s challenge to marketers to honestly assess their demand generation capability applies directly here. SEO is a demand generation tool. The question is not whether it works in theory. It is whether your programme is built well enough, measured honestly enough, and funded adequately enough to deliver the return the theory promises.
Most are not. But that is a solvable problem, not a reason to walk away from the channel.
About the Author
Keith Lacy is a marketing strategist and former agency CEO with 20+ years of experience across agency leadership, performance marketing, and commercial strategy. He writes The Marketing Juice to cut through the noise and share what works.
