If you are responsible for growing a business with a limited marketing budget, sooner or later you will be faced with this decision: Should you invest in SEO, put money into PPC, or try to do both?
Some agencies will push SEO as the only sustainable option. Others will argue that PPC is the fastest and most reliable way to generate leads. The problem is that most advice about SEO vs PPC is framed around clicks, rankings or traffic. That is not how you run a business.
You are not trying to win a marketing argument. You are trying to generate predictable leads, convert those leads into sales, and build a business that is less reliant on luck, referrals or a handful of key clients.
In this guide, we are going to walk you through SEO and PPC properly. We will explain how each channel works, where each one delivers value, what they cost in the real world, and how you should think about them if your goal is sustainable business growth rather than vanity metrics.
By the end, you should be able to make a confident, informed decision about where to invest, and why.
Most business owners struggle with this decision for three reasons.
First, SEO and PPC are often presented as opposing options, when in reality they serve different purposes at different stages of growth.
Second, there is a huge amount of conflicting information online, much of it written to sell a particular service rather than to help you make a strategic decision.
Third, many businesses have tried SEO or PPC in the past and felt that it did not work, without ever being shown why.
The result is confusion, scepticism and hesitation.
At JDR Group, we speak to managing directors and senior decision makers every week who feel exactly this way. They know they need more leads. They know digital marketing matters. But they want to invest with their eyes open and understand what they are buying, how long it will take, and what success should look like.
That is the context for this guide.
SEO, or search engine optimisation, is the process of increasing your visibility in the unpaid results of search engines like Google.
In practical terms, SEO helps your business appear when someone searches for a problem you solve, a service you provide, or a solution they are actively considering.
Good SEO is not about tricking Google. It is about making it clear, credible and easy for search engines to understand who you help, what you do, and why your business deserves to be visible.
At its best, SEO creates a steady flow of qualified visitors who already have intent. They are not being interrupted by an advert. They are actively looking for answers.
Over time, this visibility compounds. A strong piece of content can generate enquiries for years. A well-structured website builds authority and trust. The cost per lead typically falls as your presence grows.
However, SEO does not work in isolation. Rankings alone do not generate sales. SEO works when it is built on solid foundations.
That includes clear positioning, a website designed to convert visitors into enquiries, content that speaks directly to your ideal customer, and a sales process that follows up properly.
When those elements are in place, SEO becomes one of the most powerful long-term growth drivers available to an SME.
SEO is often misunderstood because it covers several interconnected areas.
At a high level, it involves:
Technical SEO, which ensures your website loads quickly, works properly on mobile devices, and can be crawled and indexed without issues.
On-page SEO, which focuses on how individual pages are structured, written and optimised for relevant searches.
Content creation, which answers real questions your ideal customers are asking and positions you as a credible authority.
Authority building, which helps search engines trust your site through links, mentions and signals from elsewhere on the web.
None of these elements works well on its own. Publishing blog posts without a strategy rarely delivers sales. Technical fixes without content give Google nothing to rank. Links without relevance rarely move the needle.
This is why many businesses feel SEO does not work for them. They have only invested in part of the picture.
One of the reasons SEO is so powerful is that it creates assets rather than just activity.
Every high-quality article, guide or service page becomes part of your digital footprint. It increases the value of your website, strengthens your brand, and reduces reliance on paid traffic over time.
For business owners thinking about future security, exit value or reducing dependency on a small number of clients, this matters.
A business that generates enquiries consistently through organic search is more resilient, more attractive to buyers, and less exposed to sudden changes in ad costs or platform rules.
SEO supports long term growth, not just short-term campaigns.
PPC, or pay-per-click advertising, allows you to appear in search results and other platforms by paying for visibility.
The most common form is Google Ads, where your advert appears above or alongside organic results when someone searches for specific keywords. You pay when someone clicks on your advert.
The key strength of PPC is speed.
Unlike SEO, which takes time to build momentum, PPC can start driving traffic almost immediately. This makes it attractive for businesses that need enquiries now, are entering a new market, or want to test demand quickly.
PPC also gives you a high degree of control. You can choose which keywords you target, where your ads appear, when they run, and how much you spend. You can pause, adjust or scale campaigns quickly.
However, PPC is not simply a tap you turn on and off without consequences. The quality of your results depends heavily on strategy, setup, conversion tracking and what happens after the click.
Effective PPC management goes far beyond writing adverts and setting a daily budget.
In practice, it involves:
• Keyword research to identify searches with genuine buying intent
• Campaign and account structure to control relevance and cost
• Ad copy that speaks directly to the searcher’s problem and stage of awareness
• Landing pages designed to convert visitors into enquiries
• Conversion tracking to measure what is actually working
• Ongoing optimisation to improve performance and reduce wasted spend
Without these elements, PPC becomes expensive very quickly.
This is why many businesses say PPC did not work for them. They paid for clicks but never built a system to turn those clicks into leads and sales.
This is one of the most common questions we hear, and it deserves a clear answer.
In most cases, SEO delivers a stronger return on investment over the long term.
Once your SEO foundations are in place, the marginal cost of each additional lead tends to fall. Content continues to attract visitors without additional spend. Authority builds rather than resets each month.
By contrast, PPC requires ongoing spend to maintain visibility. When you stop paying, the traffic stops.
However, this does not mean PPC is poor value. It means the return profile is different.
PPC often delivers faster results and more predictable short-term lead flow. SEO rewards patience and consistency.
The mistake is to ask which channel is better in isolation, rather than which channel is better for your specific goals, timeframe and resources.
Timeframe is a critical factor in this decision.
With PPC, you can start seeing traffic within days or weeks of launching a campaign. In competitive sectors, it may take time to optimise performance, but visibility is immediate.
With SEO, meaningful results usually take several months. For competitive keywords, it can take six to twelve months to build strong rankings and authority.
This does not mean nothing happens in the meantime. Early SEO work improves website quality, messaging and conversion. But you should not expect consistent organic leads in the first few weeks.
If you need enquiries this quarter, PPC often plays a role. If you are building for the next two to five years, SEO becomes essential.
PPC is often seen as more predictable because you control budgets and bids. You can model spend and estimate traffic with reasonable accuracy.
SEO can feel less predictable because it depends on search algorithms, competition and time.
However, predictability does not come from the channel alone. It comes from measurement, systems and experience.
Poorly run PPC campaigns can be wildly unpredictable and expensive. Well-planned SEO strategies become increasingly stable over time.
What matters is whether you are tracking the right metrics and managing the channel professionally.
SEO investment varies widely depending on your market, competition and goals.
For most SMEs, meaningful SEO investment starts from a few thousand pounds per month and increases from there. This covers strategy, content creation, technical work and ongoing optimisation.
Cheaper options often focus on volume rather than impact, publishing generic content that attracts traffic but not buyers.
The key question is not how cheap SEO can be, but what it is designed to achieve. If your goal is more sales, SEO must be aligned with your commercial objectives, not just rankings.
With PPC, you need to consider two costs.
The first is ad spend, which goes directly to platforms like Google. The second is management, which covers strategy, setup and optimisation.
In competitive B2B sectors, meaningful PPC campaigns often require a four-figure monthly ad budget at a minimum. Smaller budgets can work in niche markets but need careful targeting.
As with SEO, the cheapest option is rarely the most effective. PPC works best when it is treated as a system rather than a short-term experiment.
This is the wrong question asked the right way.
Clicks do not pay your bills. Leads and sales do.
PPC often has a higher cost per lead initially, but can deliver those leads quickly and consistently. SEO may have a higher upfront investment, but the cost per lead typically falls over time.
The right comparison is not which channel is cheaper, but which channel delivers the right leads at the right time for your business.
SEO tends to make more sense when:
• You sell high-value services with longer buying cycles
• Your customers research extensively before contacting suppliers
• You want to build authority and trust in your market
• You are focused on long-term growth and exit value
• You want to reduce dependency on paid advertising over time
For many established SMEs, SEO becomes a cornerstone of sustainable growth.
PPC is often the better option when:
• You need enquiries quickly
• You are launching a new service or entering a new market
• You want to test demand or messaging
• Your organic visibility is currently low
• You have clear offers and strong conversion paths
Used correctly, PPC can support growth while SEO builds in the background.
This is where most articles get it wrong.
SEO and PPC are not rivals. They are complementary tools within a wider system.
PPC data can inform SEO by revealing which keywords convert. SEO content can improve PPC performance by increasing relevance and conversion rates. Shared landing pages and messaging create consistency across channels.
When integrated properly, SEO and PPC reinforce each other and reduce overall risk.
The most common mistakes we see are:
• Treating SEO or PPC as a tactic rather than part of a strategy
• Focusing on traffic rather than conversion
• Ignoring follow-up and sales processes
• Chasing short-term results without patience
• Measuring the wrong metrics
Marketing does not fail because channels do not work. It fails because systems are incomplete.
In most cases, it comes down to expectations and execution.
SEO takes time. PPC requires structure. Neither delivers results in isolation.
Businesses that succeed invest in strategy first, then execution, then measurement. They understand that marketing supports sales, not replaces it.
At JDR Group, we start with your goals, not channels.
We look at where your leads come from now, what you sell, how long your sales cycle is, and where you want the business to go.
SEO and PPC are then positioned within our proven six-step marketing system, alongside website performance, content, conversion and sales process.
This ensures every pound you invest supports growth rather than activity.
If you want clarity rather than opinion, the next step is to step back and look at the whole picture.
You can speak to us about your business and get an honest recommendation based on your situation, not a sales script.
Or you can download our guide, How to Increase Sales which explains how SEO, PPC and other channels fit together within a sustainable growth system.
Either way, the goal is the same.
Make decisions that support sales, resilience and long-term value, not just short-term noise.