Why your business needs a proper search marketing strategy in 2025
Most businesses know they need to be visible online. Fewer actually understand what that means in practice, or why throwing a bit of budget at Google Ads every few months isn’t really a strategy so much as wishful thinking with a credit card.
Search marketing has got genuinely complicated over the past few years. Algorithm changes, AI-generated content flooding the web, shifting user behaviour, voice search, zero-click results – the list of things you’re supposed to keep on top of is long and getting longer. And yet plenty of companies are still treating SEO like something the intern handles on a Friday afternoon.
The gap between knowing you need it and actually doing it well
There’s a real difference between a business that has an SEO strategy and one that has a document called “SEO strategy” sitting in a shared Google Drive that nobody’s looked at since 2022. It’s a painful gap, and it shows up pretty clearly in search rankings — yours versus your competitors’.
The honest truth is that search marketing done properly takes time, technical knowledge, and a fairly relentless focus on what’s actually changing in search; Google alone makes thousands of adjustments to its algorithm every year. Most don’t matter enormously, but some absolutely do, and if you’re not paying attention when a significant core update rolls out, you can lose substantial organic traffic before you’ve even noticed something went wrong.
That’s where working with a specialist agency makes a practical difference rather than just a theoretical one. Not every agency is worth your money, obviously – the market is full of operators promising page one rankings and delivering very little – but the good ones bring a combination of technical SEO knowledge, paid search expertise, and content strategy that would take most in-house teams years to build. The Click Consult search marketing agency, based in Cheshire, is one of the better-known names in this space, with a track record in both organic search and paid media going back well over a decade.
Organic search isn’t dead — it’s just more demanding
You’ll still hear people claim that SEO is pointless now, that AI overviews and paid results have pushed organic listings so far down the page that nobody clicks on them anymore. That’s a bit of an exaggeration, though not entirely without basis.
Yes, zero-click searches have increased. Google’s AI summaries do sometimes answer a users questions before they reach your site, but organic search still drives an significant amount of website traffic across most industries. Brands that rank well constantly pull in leads at a cost that paid advertising can struggle to match over the long term.
High rankings in 2025 require more than they used to. You need truly useful content, solid technical foundations and a site that actually works properly on mobile, with real authority signals that Google is able to verify. Vague content full of specific keywords stopped working a long time ago, and what works now is harder to fake and takes longer to build, which is partly why experienced agencies earn their fees.
Paid search isn’t just about throwing money at Google
PPC (pay-per-click) has a reputation as the quick-win option compared to organic. You can get traffic running the same day you launch a campaign, but paid search done badly is an incredibly efficient way to burn through budget. Broad match keywords, weak ad copy, landing pages that don’t convert – each of those issues eats into your return, sometimes dramatically.
A well-managed PPC account looks completely different from a badly managed one, even if the budgets are similar. Proper keyword sculpting, negative keyword lists that actually get maintained, A/B testing on ad creative, bid strategies aligned to actual business goals rather than just click volume. It’s detailed, repetitive work that rewards consistency.
The businesses that get the most out of paid search tend to be the ones that treat it as a proper channel with dedicated resource, not an afterthought they log into once a month to check the spend.
Picking the right partner matters more than the budget
There’s no magic spend level that guarantees results in search marketing. A £5,000-a-month budget managed well will almost always outperform a £20,000 budget managed poorly. What matters is who’s doing the work and whether they actually understand your market, your customers, and what you’re trying to achieve commercially.
If you’re reassessing your approach to search in 2025, the starting point is being honest about what your current activity is actually delivering – not just impressions and clicks, but real business outcomes. Everything else follows from that.

