Business owners ask us this a lot: can ChatGPT do SEO, and if so, why would they pay for it?
The honest answer is that ChatGPT can help with parts of SEO. It cannot run the whole job. If you’re using it to write a few paragraphs and calling that a strategy, you’re likely leaving enquiries on the table.
This article breaks down what ChatGPT is genuinely useful for, what it gets wrong, and where a proper strategy still needs a person who understands your market.
For the bigger picture, start with what AI SEO actually involves before relying on ChatGPT for SEO work.
What Business Owners Actually Mean When They Ask This
If you want the strategy, structure and judgement handled properly, working with an AI SEO consultant is different from simply asking ChatGPT to write more pages.
Most people aren’t asking whether ChatGPT can technically write website copy. They’re asking whether they can skip hiring an SEO agency and just use a chatbot instead.
The reason this question comes up so often is that ChatGPT is genuinely good at producing text quickly. It sounds confident. It sounds structured. For a business owner juggling ten other things, that looks like a shortcut worth taking.
The problem is that SEO was never really about producing text. It’s about matching what your business offers to what people are searching for, structuring a site so search engines and AI tools can understand it, and building enough proof and authority that you actually rank. ChatGPT doesn’t do any of that on its own. If you want someone across all of it, working with an AI SEO consultant means the strategy side gets handled properly while AI tools get used where they’re actually useful.
What ChatGPT Actually Does Well
To be fair to the tool, there are jobs it handles decently when someone experienced is directing it.
Drafting and Restructuring Content
ChatGPT is useful for getting a first draft down. If you already know your target keyword, your audience, and the angle you want, it can produce a workable starting point faster than staring at a blank page.
The quality risk is covered further in our article on why thin AI content struggles to perform.
It’s also handy for restructuring existing content. Turning a wall of text into headings, bullet points, and shorter paragraphs is something it does reasonably well.
Brainstorming Topics and Angles
If you’re stuck on what to write about, ChatGPT can generate a list of angles related to a topic. Some will be irrelevant. Some will be genuinely useful starting points for blog topics or FAQ sections.
Summarising and Explaining Concepts
For business owners trying to understand SEO terms, ChatGPT can explain concepts in plain language. It’s a reasonable way to get up to speed on ideas like schema markup or crawl budget before a proper conversation with your agency.
What ChatGPT Cannot Replace
This is where most of the disappointment comes from. People expect ChatGPT to do the strategic and technical work, and it simply isn’t built for that.
For the bigger picture, start with what AI SEO actually involves before relying on ChatGPT for SEO work.
Keyword and Buyer Intent Research
ChatGPT doesn’t have access to real search volume data, click behaviour, or your competitors’ actual rankings. It can guess at what people search for, but it’s working from patterns in training data, not live search data. That means it can miss local search terms, seasonal shifts, and the specific phrases your customers actually type in.
Buyer intent is even trickier. Knowing that someone searching “emergency plumber Brisbane” wants to book now, while someone searching “how to fix a leaking tap” wants a DIY answer, requires understanding real search behaviour. ChatGPT can describe intent in theory. It can’t verify it against what’s actually happening in the search results for your industry right now.
Technical SEO Fixes
Site speed issues, broken internal links, crawl errors, duplicate content across service pages, mobile rendering problems — none of this gets fixed by asking ChatGPT a question. These require someone to actually go into your site, run the tools, read the data, and make changes.
ChatGPT can explain what a 404 error is. It can’t find the ones on your site or fix them.
Site Structure and Internal Linking Strategy
How your service pages link to each other, where your blog content should point, and which pages should carry the most authority — this is structural work that depends on your specific site, your specific services, and your specific competitors. It’s not something a chatbot can assess without being fed your entire site, and even then, the judgement calls about priority and structure need a human decision.
If you want a deeper look at how this fits together, our guide on what AI SEO actually involves covers the moving parts in more detail.
Proof, Trust and E-E-A-T Signals
Search engines and AI tools increasingly reward content that shows real experience — case studies, reviews, credentials, first-hand results. ChatGPT can write something that sounds like it has experience. It doesn’t actually have any. If your content reads as generic because it’s missing real proof points from your business, that’s a content quality problem no amount of prompting will fix.
The quality risk is covered further in our article on why thin AI content struggles to perform.
Where Businesses Get This Wrong
The biggest mistake we see is businesses publishing AI-written content without any editing, fact-checking, or connection to their actual services. It reads fine on the surface but says nothing specific. No local detail. No proof. No reason for a customer to trust the business over a competitor.
The second mistake is assuming ChatGPT knows how your website currently performs. It doesn’t have access to your Google Search Console data, your rankings, or your traffic. Any advice it gives about “what to fix” is a general answer, not one based on your actual site.
The third mistake is skipping the technical and structural work entirely because content feels like the easier win. Publishing more blog posts on a site with broken internal links, slow load times, or poor mobile performance won’t move rankings much. The content sits on top of a foundation that isn’t solid.
This is also where thin content becomes a real risk. If you’re using AI content without any editing or added value, it’s worth understanding why thin AI content struggles to perform in both traditional search and newer AI search tools.
What To Do Instead
Use ChatGPT for what it’s good at — drafting, brainstorming, and explaining things in plain language. Don’t ask it to do the strategy, the technical audit, or the structural planning.
A workable approach looks like this: get a proper audit done on your site’s technical health and current rankings. Build out a content plan based on real keyword and buyer intent research, not guesses. Use AI tools to speed up drafting once you know exactly what needs to be written and why. Have someone with actual SEO experience review the output, add proof points specific to your business, and check it against what’s actually ranking in your industry.
Then keep an eye on the structural side — internal links, page speed, mobile performance — because none of that improves on its own.
The Bottom Line
ChatGPT is a tool, not a strategy. It can speed up parts of the SEO process, particularly drafting and explaining concepts, but it doesn’t have access to your site’s real performance data, can’t run technical fixes, and can’t make the judgement calls that come from understanding your industry and your competitors.
If you’re trying to decide how much of this you can handle yourself and where you need support, it helps to understand where AI tools genuinely fit into the picture versus where they fall short.