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How to Split Budget Between GEO and SEO — Allocation Logic Across Three Stages, Plus 4 Common Mistakes

#GEO #SEO #budget #allocation #ROI

NoteThis article is written in Traditional Chinese.

GEO vs SEO budget — shifts as your site matures Early Growth Mature Monthly traffic < 5K 5K–50K > 50K SEO 60% GEO 30% Paid 10% SEO 40% GEO 40% Paid 20% SEO 30% GEO 50% Paid 20% Build the foundation first Two tracks in parallel GEO compounding kicks in

Why so many decision-makers ask this the wrong way

The two most common malformed versions of this question I’ve heard in the past six months:

“Is GEO going to replace SEO? Should we shift all our SEO budget over?”

“GEO is too new and unproven. Let’s watch for another year and keep doing SEO.”

Both are extremes, and both miss the mark.

The reality:

Below: three stages.


Early stage (monthly traffic < 5K): build the foundation first

Why SEO dominates here

Early-stage sites suffer from “Google doesn’t even know you exist.” Before AI can recommend you, Google has to index your content, because:

  1. ~80% of LLM training data comes from Common Crawl. If Common Crawl can’t fetch you, AI never sees you
  2. To be fetched by Common Crawl, you need external backlinks + complete Google indexation first
  3. No SEO baseline = no GEO foundation

So this stage’s spend goes on: - Writing 20+ substantive articles (which feed both SEO and the LLM training corpus) - Building 5–10 external backlinks (industry directories, partners, media coverage) - Verifying that Google Search Console shows healthy indexation

Why 30% still goes to GEO

This 30% isn’t “another round of SEO.” It’s the things SEO doesn’t directly do:

These also help SEO, but most SEO consultants don’t proactively do them (because SEO looks at Google ranking; these are longer-horizon GEO signals).

Common early-stage mistakes

❌ Dump all the budget into paid ads → no organic base; stop ads, traffic goes to zero ❌ Hire one SEO consultant to “also do GEO” → most SEO consultants haven’t updated their GEO knowledge yet, and may deliver outdated tactics ❌ Hire a content writer to crank out 100 SEO articles without schema → high volume, weak GEO signals


Growth stage (monthly traffic 5K–50K): two tracks in parallel

Why the ratio levels out

By this stage: - You have an SEO baseline and Google indexes you fine - You have some content volume but you’re not in the AI recommendation pool yet - The pain shifts to “findable on Google, but ChatGPT / Perplexity don’t recommend me

GEO’s marginal ROI now catches up with SEO’s, because:

Where the 40% GEO budget goes

Item Share Notes
Content depth upgrades 40% Take topics SEO covered and rewrite them as deeper, more authoritative long-form
Third-party authority 30% Media contributions, industry-association inclusion, Wikipedia entry prep
Structured-data improvements 15% FAQ schema, Product schema, Review schema
Measurement and iteration 15% Monthly tracking of ChatGPT / Perplexity appearance rate

Common growth-stage mistakes

Spending the GEO budget on “another 100 SEO articles”: volume doesn’t help, depth does ❌ Cranking paid ads up to 50%: usually a panic reaction when organic isn’t growing ❌ Overlapping SEO and GEO consultant scope: define who owns which dimensions before engagement


Mature stage (monthly traffic > 50K): GEO compounding kicks in

Why GEO climbs to 50%

Mature-site patterns: - SEO traffic reaches a diminishing-returns plateau (article #200 adds less than article #50 did) - But AI search market share is still rapidly expanding - AI’s citation of your content enters a flywheel phase: more in training corpora → next-generation model has deeper implicit knowledge of you → more citation → more uptake in training data

GEO’s long-tail effect now outweighs SEO’s:

What the 30% SEO does at this stage

Not giving up on SEO — maintaining the baseline: - Core Web Vitals health - Watching competitors’ new keywords and fast-following - Periodic refresh of high-performing existing pages

Spend more on GEO’s offensive surface: - Sustained media PR output - Frequent depth upgrades (writing deeper on the same topic vs writing new topics) - Internationalisation / multilingual expansion (where applicable)

Common mature-stage mistakes

Cutting SEO entirely: recovering the baseline costs 5–10× what maintaining it would ❌ GEO turning into “PR agency does it all”: lots of media exposure but no entity-signal alignment ❌ No measurement: at mature stage, no KPI tracking is just burning cash


4 most common allocation mistakes

Mistake 1: GEO 50% / SEO 50% split at every stage

Problem: insufficient SEO firepower in the early stage, insufficient GEO at the mature stage.

A “fair split” sounds balanced but is actually the worst allocation — fitting every stage means optimising for none.

Mistake 2: Skipping SEO entirely to go straight to GEO

“We’re a startup, we go straight to the newest thing.” Problems:

Mistake 3: Paid ads eating > 50%

Panic reaction: see slow organic growth, throw money at ads. But:

Correct ratio: paid ads ≤ 30%, and should be used for testing new channels / brand building, not as the main traffic source.

Mistake 4: SEO consultant doing GEO but still thinking SEO

Many SEO consultants extend into GEO but deliver:

Confirm your consultant understands AI citation ≠ Google top-rank — they overlap partially but follow different logic.


A practical decision flow

Not sure how to split? Run this quick check:

  1. Run a free GEO health check to see your “current position”
  2. Score < 50 → early-stage allocation (60/30/10): rebuild the foundation first
  3. Score 50–75 + monthly traffic 5K–50K → growth-stage allocation (40/40/20): two parallel tracks
  4. Score > 75 + monthly traffic > 50K → mature-stage allocation (30/50/20): lean into GEO

Two principles to remember:


Step one: figure out which stage you’re in

👉 Run a free GEO health check — the report gives you scores across 12 dimensions; combined with your site’s monthly traffic, you can map yourself to early / growth / mature stage per this post.

The percentages here are a starting framework. Actual ratios vary materially by industry (B2B vs B2C), market maturity, competitive intensity, and team resources. Custom budget allocation + quarterly execution + KPI alignment is the core of our managed GEO service: [email protected]


GEO fundamentals series. Previous: “GEO 30-day starter action plan”