Picking the wrong digital search partner is one of those business mistakes that doesn’t announce itself immediately. You keep paying the monthly retainer, the reports keep arriving, and it’s only six months later when you sit down with the actual revenue figures that something feels off. By then you’ve lost time you’re not getting back.
Search engine optimisation has a bit of an image problem, honestly. It got associated early on with a certain type of agency, the kind that promises page one rankings by Tuesday and delivers a PDF full of impressions and not much else. That legacy still puts a lot of business owners on edge, which is understandable. But the genuine technical work that goes into organic search strategy is a completely different thing, and the gap between doing it properly and doing it badly is enormous.
The Cheshire-based agency Click Consult has been operating in this space since 2003, which in digital marketing years is practically the Jurassic period. Most agencies that launched around that time either folded, got absorbed, or quietly moved into something else entirely. Surviving and staying specifically focused on search for over two decades says something, though it doesn’t mean they’re coasting on longevity alone.
What Separates Serious Search Work From the Rest
The honest answer is: methodology and transparency. Any agency can show you a ranking report. What they’re often less keen to show you is the reasoning behind the strategy, the expected timelines, or what happens when something isn’t working. That’s where you can usually tell whether you’re dealing with people who actually understand search, or people who’ve gotten good at pitching it.
Technical SEO in particular has become genuinely complex. Core Web Vitals, crawl budgets, structured data, international hreflang implementation (that last one can quietly destroy an international site’s performance if it’s done wrong) is not stuff you want a junior exec handling while the senior team focuses on bigger clients – yet that’s exactly what happens at a lot of agencies that have grown too fast or spread themselves too thin.
Content strategy gets similarly mishandled. There’s a version of content marketing that’s basically just writing lots of blog posts and hoping Google notices. It works sometimes, accidentally. Then there’s the version where someone has actually mapped search intent against your commercial objectives, identified gaps in the competitive landscape, and built something with a bit of architecture behind it. Those two approaches are not the same thing, and they don’t produce the same results.
The Size Question Nobody Really Asks Properly
One thing worth thinking about is whether an agency’s typical client size matches yours. An agency whose bread and butter is FTSE 100 e-commerce might not give your £2m turnover business the attention you need. Equally, a small boutique that mainly handles local tradespeople might not have the technical depth for a complex national campaign. It sounds obvious but people often don’t ask this directly in pitch meetings.
Click Consult sits in a position where they work with mid-to-large commercial clients but without the sprawling layers of account management you sometimes get at the very biggest networks (where the person who pitched you and the person actually doing the work are completely different human beings, and they’ve never spoken). Whether that suits your business depends entirely on your situation.
There’s also the paid search side to factor in. PPC and SEO used to be treated as separate disciplines, managed by different teams who barely spoke to each other. The smarter approach now is integrated, where the data from paid campaigns informs organic strategy and vice versa. Agencies that still silo these functions are leaving insight on the table.
Before You Sign Anything
Ask to speak to existing clients. Not references they’ve curated, but actual clients in similar sectors to yours. Ask what the onboarding process looked like, how they handle communication when something’s underperforming, and whether the team they met in the pitch is actually the team they work with day to day. Those questions will tell you more than any case study deck.
Digital search is a long game, and whoever you bring in is going to be embedded in your business in ways that go beyond a standard supplier relationship. Getting that decision right at the start saves an awful lot of time, money, and slightly awkward exit conversations later on.













































































