Your practice site goes live with a single "services" page covering acne, Botox, and Mohs surgery. Google crawls it, indexes it, maybe even ranks it. But your booking calendar stays empty while the clinic three blocks over fills slots daily. Here's what breaks: dermatology search intent splits three ways — medical, cosmetic, surgical — and each buyer evaluates differently, converts differently, books differently. Someone Googling "suspicious mole removal near me" is same-week conversion territory. Someone researching "best filler for marionette lines" is price-shopping four providers. Your current architecture forces both into the same funnel. That mismatch kills conversion before your credentials or reviews ever matter. Real dermatologist SEO means splitting your content layer to match how your patients actually search — condition pages for medical intent, treatment-specific pages for cosmetic buyers, urgency-driven pages for surgical consults. Then layering DataForSEO-verified targeting, local citation cleanup, and Core Web Vitals fixes that hold. Traffic without bookings is just a number going up.
أين تفشل المشاريع
الامتثال
Core Web Vitals 95+
Vertical-Specific Schema
Location + Service Area Architecture
AI Overview Optimisation
Content Pipeline
GSC + GA4 + DataForSEO Monitoring
ما نبنيه
Build medical, cosmetic, and surgical divisions as separate content silos with dedicated landing pages per buyer intent
Deploy condition-specific pages targeting acne, eczema, psoriasis, rosacea queries where your medical funnel actually starts
Create standalone skin cancer and Mohs surgery pages optimized for same-week conversion urgency and screening availability
Surface insurance and in-network pages as top-level navigation so price-sensitive patients stop filtering you out before booking
Replace vague cosmetic copy with treatment-specific pages showing pricing bands, downtime expectations, and before/after visuals
Fix generic services pages that bury high-intent queries under dropdowns your competitors are capturing with dedicated URLs
عمليتنا
Technical + Keyword Audit
Technical Foundation Pass
Content + Local SEO Foundation
Ongoing Content + Optimisation
Scale + Authority Build
الأسئلة الشائعة
Should we split medical and cosmetic dermatology content?
Yes, absolutely -- and they should be split at the top-level navigation, not buried three clicks deep. Medical and cosmetic dermatology have different buyers, different insurance situations, and completely different decision timelines. A cosmetic patient comparing filler providers in Dallas is not the same person as a medical patient looking for an in-network dermatologist for their eczema. Merging them into one page means you're writing for nobody. Splitting them means you capture both audiences properly.
How do you handle skin cancer / Mohs content?
Skin cancer and Mohs surgery need their own top-level pages -- not a paragraph under "services." These are high-urgency queries from people who are often frightened and ready to book within days. The pages need to cover what screening looks like, what Mohs surgery involves, what recovery is like, and -- critically -- that same-week appointments are available. High urgency, high lifetime value, and a patient who needs reassurance fast. Treat it accordingly.
Do you help with cosmetic-treatment pricing transparency?
Yes, pricing transparency for cosmetic treatments is worth building out properly. Pricing bands, realistic timelines, expected results, and honest downtime information per treatment -- Botox, fillers, IPL, chemical peels. Cosmetic buyers are doing comparison research before they ever pick up the phone. "Call for pricing" just means they call a competitor instead. Transparency doesn't undercut you -- it builds the trust that gets them in the door.
How quickly do results show?
Realistically: local-pack lift in 30 to 60 days if the GBP and citation work is done right. Condition and treatment page rankings in 60 to 120 days for lower-competition queries. Full practice visibility across medical, cosmetic, and surgical segments -- sustained top-3 positions in competitive markets -- that's a 6 to 12 month timeline. Anyone promising faster than that is either working in a low-competition market or overselling.
What is the typical engagement cost?
Foundation work plus the initial content build runs $12,000 to $20,000. Ongoing monthly retainers start at $1,000 per month for smaller single-location practices. Large practices or multi-location dermatology groups with aggressive growth targets typically run $5,000 to $12,000 per month. Scope drives the number -- a three-location group in a competitive metro is a very different project than a single-provider practice in a mid-size market.
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