“Waiting for Results” – Is Your Agency Working or Just Buying Time?

5min.

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26 February 2026

“Waiting for Results” – Is Your Agency Working or Just Buying Time?d-tags
Do you report the results of SEO/SEM activities to the Board, and find yourself having to explain the lack of results? At the same time, do you keep getting a message from the agency that results take time? Check how to verify if your agency is transparent and reliable in its actions, or if it is just playing for time.

5min.

Comments:0

26 February 2026

“SEO takes time” – this is not an argument for the Board

Imagine the situation: you are about to have a meeting with the Board to present marketing and sales results from the beginning of the year. The CEO asks, “Why are sales stagnant, even though we increased the budget?” And what do you answer? If the only thing the agency conveyed to you, along with the reports, is conclusions that “campaigns are still learning, and SEO needs more time,” you have just lost control over the narrative. You don’t really have any good arguments for the Board.

Waiting for results in business is acceptable only when it is a managed and planned process, not an excuse for a lack of process and commitment. The CEO does not pay for a lack of insights and the constant postponing of results. They pay for progress and results in the form of sales growth. As the person reporting activities to the board, you must have a trusted business partner on the other side who will reliably deliver work that delivers real ROI.

The “black box” myth in SEO and SEM

Agencies like to use nice words and phrases that mean little to the other party: “The algorithm is still crunching data, and we are waiting for effects”, “Google is still indexing these pages” – let’s break this down into its core components and discuss the most common myths.

SEM (paid campaigns): The “eternal campaign learning” myth – many agencies claim that the campaign is not bringing sales results because advertising systems need weeks to learn.

  • Simple fact-check: Systems actually learn quickly, usually in a few weeks (but closer to 4 than 8) if they have the right data. So if your agency, in the fourth month of cooperation, says that “the system is still learning”, it means that it has either configured the analytics poorly, is not providing fuel (data), or is not telling the truth. This is human error, and hiding behind system issues is just an excuse.

SEO: The “nothing is happening because we are waiting for Google” myth.

  • Fact-check: Indeed, you sometimes have to wait months for sales results. However, you shouldn’t have to wait for the changes to be implemented. If in the first month of the year and cooperation, no new content was created, 404 errors haven’t disappeared, linking hasn’t been improved, and there are no signals that the website is gaining traction, this is not “time needed for SEO results”. It is wasted time, resulting from the agency’s lack of processing capacity, unfairly blamed on the Google algorithm.

Passive vs. active waiting

How do you recognize if an agency is playing for time? If you receive a signal that you will have to wait a bit for the results, you need to recognize two key states – passive and active waiting. By recognizing these situations, you will know exactly what to report to the Board.

Passive waiting (red flag):

  • The agency sends a report, and the only comment is “Positions are stable, we are waiting.”
  • There are no changes in the ad account history, and no new content or subpages in SEO.
  • A passive agency will send an audit with a list of 50 things for your IT department to fix, and then use the wait for implementation as a pretext to explain the lack of results.
  • Diagnosis? The agency is counting on a “stroke of luck,” which is asking for trouble and a lack of return on investment in Q2.
Speaking of passive waiting, another important red flag appears – radio silence. If the agency does not ask any questions throughout the entire month of cooperation – about new products, sales plans, or margin priorities – it means they are acting “blindly” and not taking your business goals into account. A lack of questions from the agency is the strongest signal that they run all campaigns the same way, without adapting the strategy to your business.

Active waiting (green flag):

  • The final results (sales KPIs) may not be delivered yet, but:
    • The agency reports what is happening while waiting, e.g.: “We excluded 1000 words from the strategy that were ineffective”, “We rebuilt the header structure on 20 pages,” etc.
    • An active agency, seeing that your IT department has no capacity, says: “Give us FTP/CMS access, our development team will implement these critical changes in 48h”.

Active waiting signals that the whole process is an investment. Although the result has not yet been achieved, the work to get there is in full swing, and you have an engaged business partner cooperating on the other side.

Conclusion: Waiting for your IT is also a form of “buying time” by the agency. A real partner removes obstacles (bottlenecks) rather than hiding behind them.

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Przemek Jaskierski
Przemek Jaskierski SEO Strategy Manager

Strategy for a Manager: what to say to the CEO?

Do not go to the Board with ignorance and empty hands. Instead of reporting that we are still waiting for a return on investment and results, use the language of “building”.

When the CEO asks about the results of the campaigns being run, and you know you have to wait for sales, use the theory of Leading Indicators.

Instead of saying: “We have to wait for effects in the form of sales growth”, say: “Revenue has not increased yet, but this is a natural pattern in the first month of activities. However, we have already fixed the foundations:

  1. Traffic quality has increased (the site is recording a lower Bounce Rate),
  2. Visibility for long-tail phrases jumped by 30%,
  3. We eliminated technical errors blocking the shopping cart, thanks to which we forecast an increase in conversions.
  4. The agency is implementing the plan in accordance with the roadmap.
Such reporting of activities to the CEO changes your position from a “helpless manager who waits” to a “conscious decision-maker who keeps a finger on the pulse and monitors progress”.

Trust roadmap, or when to “check” the agency?

Month 1: This is the time to get acquainted with the project, clean up after previous, possibly unsuccessful activities, and handle configuration. Do not expect sales miracles from the very beginning of activities – at this stage, you can expect order in the data and a technical audit.

Month 2: This is a period of testing and implementing the strategy planned in the first month. At this stage, you should receive the first conclusions about what is not working, as well as corrections implemented on the site.

Month 3: This is the moment for verification. If in the 3rd month you still hear that “the campaign is learning” and “SEO needs time”, and leading indicators (traffic quality, visibility) are standing still, it is a sign that it’s time to change the partner.

Second Opinion Audit

If you are tired of explaining the lack of results to the Board, your agency is still serving you more excuses, and you need a plan – let’s check it together. Order a “Second Opinion” verification audit. We will check whether your campaign is actually “learning” or whether nothing is happening on the account. You will receive hard data from us, which you can use to go to the next meeting with the CEO.

Author

Gosia Kwiecień, Delante’s Head of SEO, leads with a decade of expertise, ensuring client success and fostering a team culture where every member’s growth and contribution is valued.

Author

Gosia Kwiecień, Delante’s Head of SEO, leads with a decade of expertise, ensuring client success and fostering a team culture where every member’s growth and contribution is valued.

FAQ

The agency says that the drop in results is the "fault of seasonality/the market". How to verify this?

Ask the agency to compare your results with market trends, e.g., using the Google Trends tool. You can also ask for a comparison of your visibility results and your competitors’. If the market trend is a drop of 5-10% over a given period, and your result is 30%, it is not a matter of the market but an incorrectly chosen strategy.

Can I audit the SEO agency's work during the contract?

Yes, it is a normal element of cooperation – trust and certainty that the budget is being well used is the basis. At Delante, we often perform a “Second Opinion” for big brands. An external audit is not intended to fire the current agency, but to determine whether the “radio silence” stems from the industry’s specificity or from a lack of action.

My agency does not give me access to the advertising panel/tools. They claim it is their know-how.

Bluntly speaking: run away. In a partnership cooperation model, the data is your property. Hiding panels is the most common tactic to mask inactivity, i.e., the aforementioned passive waiting. If the client cannot see that the work has not been done, they “won’t complain”.