If the Seahawks have a poor W-L record this year, the silver lining is that it'll be easier to get the players they want in the draft next year, probably without needing to lose any of their significant draft capital by trading up.
On the other hand, if the Seahawks surprise and, despite their weakness at QB, have a non-shameful W-L record, they might well have to package picks to move up and get one or more specific players, but the silver lining will be that the team is ahead of schedule on the journey back to title-contender status, so they won't need the same efficiency in the use of the draft capital they've got for 2023. They might not be able to get as many good players with their picks as if they were to end up with one of the, say, three worst W-L records in the league, but if the team has won, say, seven games in 2022, that'll be a sign they don't need as many good players.
I think this is part of why I'm much more relaxed as we get close to the start of the 2022 season than I have been since... jeeze... I guess since the end of XLIX. I think the Wilson trade has given the team a lot of flexibility it previously didn't have in terms of how to build going forward, and as a result, there is a wide range of possible results for the 2022 season that can end up turning out pretty positive for the Seahawks over the next several seasons.