- June 4th 2026
- Blog,Digital Advertising,digital marketing,PPC,SEO
SEO vs Google Ads: why they work better together
Quick takeaway
Google Ads puts you in front of buyers today. SEO earns the trust and visibility that works consistently in the long term. Run them together and the same person sees your brand more than once, in paid and in organic results, which builds confidence and makes your marketing budget go further. The smart move is rarely one or the other. It is both, in a balance that changes as your business grows.
You have a set marketing budget and a decision to make. You know you need visibility online, but while some swear by SEO, others will automatically reach for Google Ads. So it can feel like a bit of a gamble when it comes to actually bringing in business.
At Leapfrog Internet Marketing, getting UK businesses found is what we do every day, across both channels, tracking and reporting our results in plain English.
We think it’s worth understanding what each one does well, where each one struggles, and how to combine SEO and Google Ads so your budget works as hard as you do.
The short-term wins of Google Ads
Google Ads buys visibility the moment your campaign goes live. Where organic SEO takes months to build, a paid campaign that’s set up well places you at the top of the results page within a day or two. That speed makes it the right tool when you need enquiries now.
Paid search gives you:
- immediate placement above the organic results for the searches that matter to you
- control over who sees your ad, by location, device, time of day, and search term
- fast, clean data on which keywords turn into enquiries
- the freedom to scale spend up and down for seasonal businesses
The trade-off is honest and simple. The moment you stop paying, the visibility stops with it. Costs are climbing too. According to WordStream’s 2025 benchmarks, the average cost per click rose across 87% of industries year on year, which follows an ongoing trend. In competitive fields like legal and finance, a single click runs among the highest of any sector, which makes careful management the difference between profit and waste.
The long-term growth of SEO
Search engine optimisation is the asset that keeps working after the invoice is paid. Strong content, a sound website structure, and earned authority build on each other over time, so the traffic you create actually contributes towards maintaining your authority signals moving forward. Around 53% of all website traffic still comes from organic search, and people tend to trust a result they believe was earned rather than bought.
For service businesses, SEO also covers the whole journey. Someone might start with “do I need a solicitor for probate”, move on to “family law firm near me”, and finally search your name. A good search engine optimisation strategy meets them at every stage, building familiarity long before they are ready to call. But you need to be patient. Meaningful results usually take six to twelve months, so SEO rewards businesses thinking long term.
Why SEO and Google Ads work better together
The biggest gain comes from approaching from both angles, because that is closer to how people actually search. Buyers rarely move in a straight line. They research on one channel, compare on another, and increasingly explore an idea with an AI assistant before turning to a search engine to choose a supplier. Appearing in more than one place along that path keeps you in the running.
That is where multiple points of contact earn their keep. When someone sees your business in the paid results and again in the organic listings, your brand starts to feel established rather than lucky. That repetition builds confidence, lifts your overall click-through, and improves online discoverability across the board.
There is a practical bonus, too. Your Google Ads data shows you exactly which search terms turn clicks into enquiries, often within weeks. Feed those proven terms into your SEO content plan and you build organic pages around keywords you already know convert, rather than guessing. Use the data you glean from paid into informing your organic strategy.
This matters even more as AI reshapes the results page. Google’s AI Overviews and assistants like ChatGPT and Claude now answer many queries directly, which means earned authority and a recognisable brand count for more, not less. The businesses visible across paid, organic, and AI-cited content are the ones that keep showing up.
Tips for making your marketing budget work harder
You do not need a large budget to use both channels well. You need the right split for your situation and the discipline to let each channel do its job.
- if you need enquiries this month, start ads-led while you lay SEO foundations in the background
- use what your ads data tells you about converting search terms to shape your organic content
- protect a portion of SEO spend through quieter months rather than switching it off and losing momentum
- give your most profitable services more investment than your slow movers
- measure against leads and revenue, not rankings or clicks alone
As your organic rankings strengthen, you can ease paid spend on the terms you now rank for and move that budget to areas where SEO has not yet caught up. The ideal scenario is that over time, your cost per enquiry falls because organic is doing more of the heavy lifting.
SEO and Google Ads compared
| SEO alone | Google Ads alone | SEO and Google Ads together | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Speed of results | Slow, six to twelve months | Immediate, live within days | Quick wins now, lasting growth later |
| Cost structure | Ongoing investment, lower cost per lead over time | Pay per click, stops when budget stops | Balanced spend that lowers cost per enquiry over time |
| Longevity | Compounds and lasts | Ends the moment you pause | Steady presence with a paid safety net |
| Control | Limited control over placement | Precise control over targeting and budget | Control today, authority tomorrow |
| Trust earned | High, organic feels earned | Lower, “Sponsored” labels are sometimes ignored | Strongest, your brand appears in both |
| Best for | Long-term authority and lower costs | Launches, seasonal peaks, fast leads | Most UK businesses wanting steady growth |
How to decide what’s right for you right now
The right balance comes down to taking an honest approach. Work through these before you commit your budget:
- how soon you need enquiries, since SEO will not deliver them this month
- what you can afford to pay to win a customer, worked back from your margins
- how competitive your market is, judged by who already ranks for your main terms
- whether you can take a twelve-month view, because SEO rewards patience
If you need leads fast, lean on Google Ads while SEO builds. If you have some breathing room and want lower costs down the line, prioritise SEO. For most businesses the answer sits somewhere in the middle, and it changes as you grow.
Putting it all together
SEO and Google Ads are not rivals fighting over your budget. They are two halves of a stronger whole, one buying you visibility today and the other earning it for years to come. Get the balance right and you’ll start showing up wherever your customers are looking.
That balance is what we do best. Get in touch and tell us your business story. We’ll be able to tell you honestly where your budget is best spent to get your brand visible, onto page one and into the conversations that matter.
Frequently asked questions
How long does SEO take to work?
Most businesses see organic results in six to twelve months, depending on how competitive their market is and the state of their website. Google Ads, by contrast, can generate traffic within days, which is why many businesses run ads while their SEO builds.
How should I split my budget between SEO and Google Ads?
There is no single right ratio. Newer businesses that need enquiries quickly often lean towards ads, while established businesses with some organic visibility focus on SEO to lower their long-term costs. The best split depends on your margins, your market, and how fast you need results, and it should change as you grow.
How do I measure whether SEO and Google Ads are working?
Tie both channels to leads and revenue, since clicks alone don’t tell the full story. Google Ads reports conversions directly, so you can clearly see your cost per enquiry. For SEO, track organic enquiries, rankings for your priority terms, and growth in qualified traffic over time. Leapfrog have created bespoke reporting for both which demystifies the data for our clients.
Does AI search change the SEO vs Google Ads question?
Yes. AI Overviews and assistants now resolve many searches on the results page, so fewer people click through for answers. That makes a recognisable brand and earned authority more valuable, and it rewards businesses that appear across organic, paid, and AI-cited content. The more places you show up, the more likely AI is to mention you.
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