SEO delivers traffic, but it doesn't speak your language. Here's how to reframe your strategy in terms that win funding and executive support.
Your SEO team is probably doing excellent work. They've optimized your site architecture, improved Core Web Vitals, built a solid link profile, and refined your content framework. You're ranking higher, getting more traffic, and your organic channel is growing. But when they ask for next year's budget, they get a lukewarm response. That gap between technical excellence and funding approval is the real problem.
According to Search Engine Land, the SEO industry has become extraordinarily good at its technical craft, but it has lagged in connecting that craft to the financial realities of the businesses it serves. SEO teams speak in rankings, traffic, impressions, and crawl efficiency. Your finance team and leadership speak in pipeline, customer acquisition cost, and revenue per channel. Those two languages rarely meet.
When your SEO team presents a strategy around entity optimization or internal linking architecture, your CFO hears: we're making technical improvements to something you already bought. When paid search presents a strategy, they hear: we will acquire customers at a known cost. One sounds optional. The other sounds like a lever you can pull.
SEO gets deprioritized not because it doesn't work, but because its ROI is invisible to decision-makers. That invisibility isn't an accident—it's a communication problem. Your SEO team is optimizing for search engines and users, which are the right tactics. But they're not measuring for your business.
Start by requiring your SEO strategy to be built around commercial outcomes, not search outcomes. That means:
This shift changes everything. Suddenly your SEO strategy isn't a technical initiative to maintain—it's a revenue-generating channel with a measurable return. That's when it gets budget. That's when it gets a seat at the table.
Before approving any SEO strategy or budget increase, ask:
If your team can't answer these questions in concrete business terms, they don't have a commercial strategy yet. Send them back to the drawing board. You're not asking them to stop optimizing for search engines. You're asking them to prove they're optimizing for your business.
Because ranking and converting are different. Your team likely measures success in positions and traffic, not in leads that close or revenue per customer. Most SEO strategies are disconnected from your actual sales outcomes, so funding requests sound theoretical instead of essential.
You need to connect organic traffic to your CRM or sales data and measure attributed revenue, not just clicks. Your SEO team should report on qualified leads generated, customer acquisition cost from organic, and pipeline value—the same metrics you use to evaluate paid search or sales outreach.
Ask for a specific business outcome: how many additional qualified leads will this drive, what's the expected revenue impact, and how does the cost-per-acquisition compare to your other channels. If they can't answer in those terms, they don't have a commercial strategy yet.
Yes, but only if it's framed in the same language—cost per lead, conversion rate, revenue per dollar spent. When SEO teams measure success purely by rankings or impressions instead of outcomes, paid search always wins the budget fight because paid is built to prove ROI.