Almost every business owner who calls us asks a version of the same thing: should we do SEO or Google Ads? It sounds like a simple either or, and most articles online treat it that way. The real answer is more interesting, because the two are not really competing for the same job. One buys you attention today. The other earns you attention that keeps paying off long after the work is done. Before you put a dollar into either, it helps to understand exactly what you are buying, what it costs, and how quickly it pays back.
What Google Ads actually is
Google Ads is the fastest way to appear at the very top of a search. When someone searches, Google runs a lightning fast auction to decide which ads show and in what order, and you pay only when someone actually clicks. According to Google’s own documentation, your bid is only one factor. The quality and relevance of your ad and landing page matter just as much, which means a sharper, more relevant ad can win a better position at a lower cost than a competitor who simply bids more.
The appeal is control and speed. You can be live the day you launch, choose exactly which searches trigger your ad, set a daily budget, and turn it on or off whenever you like. The catch is just as simple: the moment you stop paying, the visibility disappears. Ads are a tap, not a well.
What SEO actually is
SEO, or search engine optimization, is the work of earning your way into the organic results, the listings below the ads that Google ranks on merit. You are not paying for those clicks. You are making your site the answer Google wants to show, through faster pages, clearer content that matches what people search, and signals of trust from other credible sites.
The trade is time for durability. Google is upfront that results are not instant. Its SEO Starter Guide notes that some changes take effect in hours while others take months, and that you should generally wait weeks before judging the impact. The payoff is that a page which climbs the rankings keeps bringing in visitors month after month without a per click charge. SEO is a well you dig once and keep drawing from, as long as you maintain it.
SEO vs Google Ads at a glance
| Google Ads | SEO | |
|---|---|---|
| How you appear | Paid spot marked Sponsored, usually above everything | Earned organic listing below the ads |
| Speed to results | Live the day you launch | Weeks to months to build |
| What you pay for | Each click, through a live auction | The work, not the clicks |
| Cost over time | Stops the instant you stop paying | Compounds and keeps working after |
| Trust and clicks | Some searchers skip the ads | Many searchers trust organic results more |
| Control | Precise targeting, budget and timing | Ranking is earned, less direct control |
| Best suited to | Immediate leads, launches, testing | Long term, compounding visibility |
Read the table one way and Ads look better. Read it another way and SEO does. That is the clue that the question is not really which one wins, but when each one earns its place.
When Google Ads is the smarter first move
Ads make sense first when you need results now and cannot wait for rankings to build. A brand new site has no authority yet, so paid placement is often the only way to appear on page one this month. If you are launching a product, filling seats for a seasonal push, or opening a new location, Ads put you in front of buyers immediately. They are also a fast, honest testing ground: within a couple of weeks you can learn which search terms actually convert and which messages land, insight that is expensive to gather any other way.
When SEO deserves the lead
SEO earns the lead when your budget is tighter over the long run and you want traffic you are not renting. High intent local searches, the kind that end in “near me”, reward businesses that have quietly built up their pages and reputation. If you are in it for years rather than weeks, every month of SEO lowers your reliance on paid clicks. It is the difference between renting your visibility and owning it.

The part most businesses miss
Here is what usually gets lost in the either or framing: Ads and SEO make each other stronger. The keyword and conversion data from a short Ads campaign tells you exactly which terms are worth targeting with content, so your SEO stops being guesswork. As those organic rankings grow, you can ease back on ad spend for the terms you now own, and put that budget toward tougher, higher value searches. Run both and you can occupy the paid spot and the organic result on the same page, which crowds out competitors and doubles your chances of the click. Ads can even retarget the visitors that SEO first brought to your door.
None of this is about vanity. More than half of Canadians say a professional website makes a business look more credible, according to CIRA’s Canada’s Internet Factbook, the national organization that manages the .CA domain. Showing up in search, through either channel, is how that credibility gets seen in the first place.
A realistic starting mix
For most small businesses, the practical path is to start Ads to generate leads and learning right away, while SEO builds underneath. As the organic results mature, the balance tips toward SEO and your cost per lead tends to fall. If budget only allows one to begin with, choose based on your timeline: need customers this quarter, lead with Ads; building for the next few years, lead with SEO. For a sense of what each costs in this market, our guide on how much SEO costs in Montreal breaks down the ranges.
Frequently asked questions
Is SEO cheaper than Google Ads?
Over time, usually yes, because you are not paying for every click. Upfront, SEO asks for patience and consistent work before it pays back, while Ads cost money from day one but deliver traffic immediately. They are cheap and expensive in different ways.
If I rank organically, can I stop paying for ads?
Often you can reduce ad spend on the terms you now rank for, then redirect that budget to more competitive searches or new services. Many businesses keep a lean Ads presence on their most valuable keywords even after ranking, to own more of the page.
How long does each take to work?
Google Ads can bring traffic the same day. SEO generally takes three to six months to show meaningful movement and closer to a year for competitive terms, which matches Google’s own guidance that results build over weeks and months.
Can I do both on a small budget?
Yes, and it is often the smartest use of a small budget. A modest Ads campaign funds quick leads and gathers keyword data, while a focused SEO effort builds the free traffic that lowers your costs later.
Which one gives a better return?
It depends on your timeline and market. Ads tend to win on speed and predictability, SEO on long term cost. The strongest return usually comes from using each for what it does best rather than betting everything on one.
Not sure which mix fits your business? Book a free consultation and we will look at your goals, your market and your budget, then recommend a plan in French or English. To see how each side is run, visit our Google Ads management and SEO services pages.
