Most founders who hire an SEO agency have the same problem six months in: they have a report, a spreadsheet of ranking improvements, and no idea whether any of it is connected to their revenue.
That is not a reporting problem. It is a visibility problem. And it is fixable.
Rankings Are a Data Point, Not a Result
This is where most people get confused. Rankings going up is a good sign. It is not a result.
A result is a qualified lead who found you through organic search and booked a call. A result is your service page appearing when your target buyer types in the problem you solve. Rankings are the mechanism. They are not the outcome.
If your SEO provider sends you a monthly report and the headline is “we moved 14 keywords to page one,” ask the next question: which pages are those keywords pointing to, and what happened on those pages after people landed? If they cannot answer that, the reporting is incomplete.
Traffic That Does Not Convert Is a Strategy Problem
Some businesses have healthy organic traffic and a flat lead pipeline from search. The instinct is to push for more traffic. Usually, the right answer is different content.
A lot of B2B sites rank well for informational queries, terms that attract people who are researching a topic, not evaluating a vendor. That traffic is not worthless. But it converts differently and on a longer timeline than traffic from someone searching for a specific solution.
Good SEO strategy distinguishes between these. Informational content builds topical authority and feeds the top of the funnel. Transactional content, pages targeting buyers who are close to a decision, needs to do different work entirely. It needs clarity, trust signals, and a direct path to conversion.
If your site has traffic but no conversions, look at the intent behind the terms that are driving it before you assume the problem is the volume.
The Technical Foundation Shows Up Later
Here is something that tends to surprise people. A lot of the work that produces ranking gains six months from now is happening in the first 60 days. Not content. Not backlinks. Technical fixes.
Crawl errors that prevent Google from properly indexing key pages. Duplicate content created by URL parameters or pagination. Internal linking that distributes authority unevenly across the site. These are not glamorous problems. They also do not have an obvious cause-and-effect timeline. You fix them in February and you start seeing the benefit in July.
This is why an SEO provider who skips the technical audit and goes straight to publishing content is a risk. The content work is visible and easy to show in a deliverable. The technical work is harder to package. But the technical foundation is what determines whether the content work compounds.
(This is also why the first conversation with any SEO provider worth working with should include questions about your site, not a pitch about their process.)
For a detailed breakdown of what good SEO actually looks like at each stage, from technical setup through reporting and realistic timelines, this guide on how to tell if your SEO is working explains it well.
Backlinks Matter Less Than Where They Come From
Backlinks still carry weight. A link from a publication your target buyers actually read tells Google something real. A hundred links from generic directories tells Google something too. It is not the same message.
The providers who promise a fixed number of backlinks per month at a predictable price are usually building the second kind. The providers doing the harder work, digital PR, editorial placements, original research worth citing, cannot sell it that way because the output is slower and less predictable.
Ask where the links are coming from. Ask to see examples. If you get a spreadsheet with domain authority scores and no recognizable publication names in your industry, you have the answer.
What Month-Over-Month Progress Actually Looks Like
Realistic SEO takes 6 to 12 months to show results that connect clearly to business outcomes. That is not a caveat. That is the normal timeline for organic growth done right.
Months one and two are typically infrastructure: technical cleanup, keyword strategy, the first pieces of content going live. Months three through six are when early content starts to gain traction and the technical fixes start to register. Month six through twelve is when the compounding becomes visible, rankings stabilizing, organic traffic growing steadily, lead quality from search improving.
The instinct, especially for founders who are used to paid channels, is to look for results at 90 days. Paid search can do that. SEO cannot, not reliably. A provider who promises page one results in 30 days is either targeting terms with no volume or is not being straight with you.
The Question That Actually Matters
After six months of working with an SEO provider, you should be able to answer this: which pages on our site are bringing in organic visitors who match our buyer profile, and what did those visitors do?
If you cannot answer that, you do not have a measurement problem. You have a strategy problem. Good SEO produces a traceable path from organic search to pipeline. Not perfectly attributable, attribution is never clean. But traceable.
If your provider’s monthly report does not connect the dots between keywords, pages, traffic, and conversion events, ask them to rebuild it. Any provider worth keeping will know exactly how to do that, and will probably agree it should have been set up that way from the start.
SEO is not complicated at the conceptual level. Rank for terms your buyers are searching. Convert the traffic that arrives. Build authority over time by publishing content that earns it. The difficulty is in the execution, and in telling apart the providers who are doing the real work from the ones who are very good at reporting the appearance of it.


