How elective medical practices can show up in AI search results

Is SEO still a relevant strategy to help get elective medical practices found by potential patients? Yes, but there’s also a new strategy to achieve this goal and it’s called AEO. Basically, what it means is having your web page found and included in AI search results. That is the first thing online searchers now see when using Google search and it works very differently from traditional SEO. Here’s how to make sure that your content is showing up in that top AI search summary.

Why Page Structure Matters More Than Ever for Elective Practices

Patients no longer start their research by browsing websites.

Today they still ask the same questions:

  • “Best med spa near me”

  • “How much do veneers cost?”

  • “Is Botox safe?”

  • “Can chiropractic care help back pain?”

But i

ncreasingly, those questions are answered directly by AI systems like ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, and voice assistants before patients ever visit a website.

Modern search engines don’t just scan keywords — they analyze, summarize, and extract information from web pages in real time. If your content isn’t clearly structured, AI systems may skip your practice entirely in favor of competitors whose information is easier to interpret. 

For elective healthcare practices, this means:

Your website must be structured to answer patient questions clearly, not just promote services.

The Ideal AEO Page Structure for Elective Medical Practices

 

A Clear, Patient-Focused Page Title (H1)

Your headline should directly match how patients ask questions and can be written either in question form or as a clear answer to a common question.

Good examples:

  • Botox treatment in Greenville, SC: Cost, results and safety
  • Dental veneers: Cost, procedure and results explained
  • Can chiropractic care eliminate back pain?

 

Avoid:

  • Clever slogans and puns
  • Brand-heavy headlines
  • Marketing language without clarity 
  • Superlatives (the best, ultimate, etc.)

AI systems prioritize explicit, descriptive titles written in natural language.

 

Put the answer near the top

Patients and AI engines want an immediate clear answer to the question that is posed.

Within the first paragraph, clearly answer:

  • What the treatment is (avoid jargon)
  • Who and what it helps (examples: people with prominent wrinkles around the mouth, people with missing or broken teeth, people with chronic neck pain)
  • The expected outcome
  • Typical cost and timeline

Example: Botox is a non-surgical treatment that reduces wrinkles by relaxing facial muscles. Most patients see results within 3-7 days and treatments typically last 3-4 months.

This answer-first format makes your content easy for AI systems to extract and cite.

 

Add a “key takeaways” or quick summary section

Immediately after your introduction, include a short summary.

Example:

Key Takeaways

  • Botox treatments take about 15 minutes

  • Results last 3–4 months

  • Minimal downtime

  • Ideal for forehead lines and crow’s feet

Short summaries help AI engines identify core insights quickly and improve citation likelihood.

 

Use Question-Based Headings

Structure sections exactly like patient questions. So instead of a heading that reads “Treatment Benefits,” try:

  • What Does Botox Treat?
  • How Much Do Dental Veneers Cost?
  • How Many Chiropractic Visits Are Needed?
  • What Are the Risks?

AI systems strongly favor Q&A formatting because it mirrors how users search and naturally speak.

 

Break Content into Digestible Sections

Avoid long clinical explanations.

Best practice:

  • 2–4 sentence paragraphs

  • One idea per section

  • Bullet points where possible

AI engines process content in smaller chunks and extract standalone passages more reliably when information is clearly separated.

 

Include FAQs on Every Service Page

Elective healthcare decisions involve uncertainty because there is no sense of a vetting process through the health insurance company, results are often subjective and patients pay out of pocket for the services.

Add FAQs such as:

  • How long do results last?

  • Is there downtime?

  • How much does treatment cost?

  • Who is a good candidate?

  • What are the risks?

FAQ sections are among the most frequently cited content types by answer engines because they provide direct, structured answers.

 

Establish Authority and Trust Signals

AI systems favor trustworthy medical sources, so it’s important to establish the content’s credibility both on the About Us page of the website and in lighter form on key clinical pages.

Include the following on the About page:

  • Provider credentials

  • Professional degress (MD, DO, DDS, NP, PA, RN, etc.)
  • Licensure
  • Certifications including board certifications
  • Specialty training
  • Professional memberships 
  • Years of experience

  • Treatment volume

  • Before-and-after results

  • Medical supervision details

  • Updated publish dates

On each clinical page, include a line near the top or bottom of the page reinforcing medical oversight.

Examples:

Treatments are performed under the supervision of Dr. Jane Smith, DDS, a cosmetic dentist with 15+ years of experience in aesthetic restorative dentistry.

All injectable treatments are administered by licensed medical professionals under physician supervision.

In addition, for blogs and guides, include a line at the bottom with the provider name, credentials and a link to the bio or About page.

Clear expertise signals help AI engines determine credibility before citing your content.

 

Connect information to real patient outcomes

Elective healthcare content performs best when it answers:

  • What results should I expect?

  • How long will it take to get the results I am seeking?
  • How will I look or feel?

  • What happens next?

Include:

  • Treatment timelines

  • Recovery expectations

  • Maintenance schedules

  • Realistic outcomes

For aesthetic treatments, you can even include photos of before, just after the treatment and then after a certain amount of time to show the progress. For less visible treatments such as chiropractic treatment, include information on soreness and mobility changes post-treatment.

Original insights increase the chance of being referenced by AI systems.

 

Use Structured Data Behind the Scenes

In your website’s code, your developer or marketing partner should implement:

  • FAQ schema

  • Medical Procedure schema

  • Local Business schema

  • Review schema

Structured data helps AI understand meaning and relationships within your content.

 

Design pages for retrieval, not just appearance

Avoid hiding important information behind:

  • Tabs

  • Pop-ups

  • Interactive scripts

  • Download-only content

AI engines must be able to read your core information directly on the page to use it.

 

The Big Shift for Elective Medical Practices

Traditional websites were designed to rank. Modern websites must be designed to be quoted.

In AI-driven search:

  • Visibility often happens before clicks

  • Authority forms through AI recommendations

  • Patients arrive already educated

Practices that structure content for answers — not advertising — will dominate patient discovery.

 

Bottom Line

Elective healthcare websites should now function as:

✅ Patient education hubs

✅ Trust-building resources

✅ AI-readable knowledge sources

Because the practices that get cited by AI are increasingly the ones patients choose first.

Hyperlocal influencers for med spas

 

When it comes to generating new patient leads for your med spa, it pays to take a multi-pronged approach. Doing Meta (particularly Instagram) ads and Google Maps local SEO are musts to get the word out to potential clients in your geographic area. In addition, you should be active on organic social media, posting relevant and understandable content and interacting with followers to increase engagement and drive appointment booking. But there is another strategy that you may be overlooking: marketing through hyperlocal influencers.

 

What is a hyperlocal influencer? 

You are probably familiar with social media influencers and when you think about them, you might picture someone like Taylor Swift or one of the Kardashians with their millions of followers. However, there are many different levels of influencer and for a business that serves a pretty limited geographic area, engaging a major influencer would be a giant expense, with most of that money wasted.

 

For general businesses, the most cost-effective influencers tend to be what is called a micro-influencer, defined as someone who has between 10,000 and 50,000 followers. However, even this level of influencer is usually too big (read: expensive) for a med spa to get a great ROI. Hyperlocal influencers have fewer than 10,000 followers, and those followers are concentrated in a specific geographic area like a town, neighborhood or city district. They post local-focused content such as restaurant or entertainment reviews, shopping/fashion or wellness/beauty/fitness for residents of that particular neighborhood or area.

 

What kind of hyperlocal influencer should you seek? 

Look for hyperlocal influencers in the wellness, beauty or fitness space that don’t compete with your offerings. For example, if your med spa offers body contouring services, you might want to partner with a functional medicine, biohacking or nutritionist influencer. Their followers are already interested in body wellness and may even be losing weight and wanting to take the next step to get rid of stubborn fat or address loose skin. They also trust the opinion of the influencer they follow and would therefore be more inclined to trust a med spa that he or she recommends. Here are some other types of hyperlocal influencers you may want to consider:

  • Yoga, tai chi, barre and pilates instructors
  • Makeup artists, hair stylists, lash and brow techs
  • City guides oriented toward female audiences
  • Mom bloggers
  • Wedding planners

 

What to look for when choosing a hyperlocal influencer

First, you want someone whose audiences is primarily or solely in your geographic area, preferably within a 20-minute drive from your location. Next, look at the influencer’s audience. Is it mostly people in your target demographic, say women between ages 35 and 75? You also want to avoid anyone who has spoken poorly of the types of interventions you provide. For example, you don’t want to use someone who says injections aren’t necessary and people should just do whatever (lymphatic massage, use tallow balm, use sheet masks etc.). You also will want to avoid an influencer who has promoted a competitor or substitute product recently because they will sound disingenuous when promoting your business.

How to evaluate the influencer’s audience engagement

Next, you want to look at the influencer’s engagement statistics. How engaged are the audience? Do they like, comment and buy or just passively digest the content? You ideally want someone with an engagement rate of 6% or more, although anywhere between 3-5% is also good. You can calculate the engagement rate by taking the number of average likes and comments per post, dividing it by the total number of followers and multiplying that by 100.

When evaluating the influencer’s account, take a look at the comments. Are comments written in complete sentences? Are there multi-sentence comments and are they thoughtful? Well-written and thoughtful comments point not only to engaged followers but also followers who are more likely to be highly educated and able to afford regular visits to your med spa.

Verify the hyperlocal nature of the influencer. Look for these signs:

  • City/area/neighborhood listed in the profile
  • They follow other local businesses
  • Posts include tagged nearby businesses
  • Ask them what percentage of their followers are within a reasonable driving distance to your business – at least 60% but preferably more is ideal

How much do hyperlocal influencers charge? 

This is going to depend on the area you are talking about (uptown Manhattan will be more than, say Greenville, South Carolina). It will also depend on the influencer’s audience size and positioning (is this someone who only talks about luxury products and businesses or is it a mom blogger with a wider socio-economic audience?). Here are some general guidelines:

Audience size of 1,000 – 5,000

  • Post and caption: $50-200
  • Stories (1-3 slides): $30-120
  • Post and stories bundle: $120-300
  • Event appearance: $200-400

Audience size of 5,000 – 15,000

  • Single static post: $200-500
  • Stories with poll or CTA: $100-300
  • Carousel post: $300-700
  • Reels/video: $400-900
  • Event appearance: $400-1,200

 

If you would like help with hyperlocal influencers for your med spa, contact us!