Blogs are widely recommended as an SEO tool — but are they right for every business? An honest look at the benefits, the commitment, and when they are not worth the effort.
A business blog, when done well and maintained consistently, can deliver genuine benefits — particularly for search visibility. The argument goes like this: each new blog post is a new page on your website, and each new page is another opportunity to appear in search results for terms your potential customers are searching for. A business that publishes one useful, well-written article per week will, over time, have hundreds of indexed pages covering a wide range of relevant topics.
Beyond search, a blog can demonstrate expertise, answer common customer questions before they are asked, and give visitors a reason to return to your site. For some businesses — particularly those in knowledge-based industries like law, accountancy, finance, or consultancy — a well-maintained blog is a genuinely powerful business tool.
This is the point that most blog advocates do not mention. A blog with its most recent post dated two years ago tells every visitor that the business has either lost interest or, worse, may no longer be trading. It actively undermines the credibility it was supposed to build. An abandoned blog is worse than no blog at all.
Writing useful blog content takes time — researching topics, writing clearly, editing, finding or creating images, publishing, and promoting. Most small business owners are already stretched. The enthusiasm that launches a blog in January has often evaporated by March. Before committing to a blog, be honest with yourself about whether you have the time and discipline to maintain it long term.
Publishing thin, poorly written, or repetitive content in the hope of accumulating pages is a strategy that no longer works. Google has become significantly better at recognising and ignoring low-quality content. A blog post that does not genuinely inform or help the reader is unlikely to rank, and may actively dilute the quality signals of your site.
A blog is not the only way to grow the content on your website. Detailed service pages, case studies, FAQ pages, guides, and resource sections all add indexable content without requiring the ongoing commitment of a regular blog.
A blog is a long-term commitment, not a quick fix. If you are going to do it, do it properly and consistently. If you are not in a position to do that, focus your energy on making your core pages as good as they can possibly be — that will serve you better than an irregular, half-maintained blog.
Rather than a traditional blog with dated posts, consider building a permanent content section — a collection of evergreen pages covering topics relevant to your industry. Depending on your business, this might take the form of a Resources section, a Help Centre, an FAQ, a Learning Hub, a Glossary, a Guides library, a Newsroom, a Case Studies archive, or a Toolkits and Templates area. These approaches share the same SEO benefits as a blog without the obligation of a regular publishing schedule, and the format can be chosen to suit what your business actually has to offer.
This approach works particularly well for small businesses that have useful knowledge to share but cannot sustain the ongoing pace that a proper blog demands.