Your practice goes live online the moment someone's dog eats chocolate at midnight. Veterinary SEO captures that urgency — emergency-hours schema, species-specific landing pages, and local-pack visibility when your buyer is panicking and needs you now. Generic SEO burns your budget on informational fluff while high-intent queries like "emergency vet open now" go to competitors who structured their technical foundation correctly. Your practice needs Core Web Vitals remediation, LocalBusiness schema tuned to veterinary availability patterns, and content architecture that mirrors how pet owners actually search — emergency first, specialty services second, wellness third. DataForSEO-verified keyword targeting eliminates guesswork. NAP consistency across your citation profile stops local-pack suppression. And conversion tracking connects every ranking gain to appointment bookings, not vanity traffic. Get the technical foundation wrong and your content has nowhere to stand.
プロジェクトが失敗する理由
コンプライアンス
Core Web Vitals 95+
Vertical-Specific Schema
Location-Aware Site Architecture
AI Overview Optimisation
Content Pipeline
GSC + GA4 + DataForSEO Monitoring
構築する内容
Deploy emergency-hours schema so midnight searches surface your availability
Build species-specific pages for avian, exotic, equine, and reptile queries
Fix Core Web Vitals issues crushing your mobile LCP and CLS scores
Audit NAP inconsistencies bleeding your local-pack ranking across citations
Target specialty-service queries worth 5-10x higher lifetime client value
Track AI Overview mentions through DataForSEO so ChatGPT cites your practice
私たちのプロセス
Technical + Keyword Audit
Technical Foundation Pass
Content + Local SEO Foundation
Ongoing Content + Optimisation
Scale + Authority Build
よくある質問
Why is veterinary SEO CPC so high ($87)?
A captured veterinary client is worth $2-5K annually in recurring visits -- and that's before you factor in the 10-15 year relationship lifespan or the referrals they send. Lifetime value per acquired client runs $25-75K depending on species and service mix. That's why veterinary CPCs are high. The economics justify it.
Do specialty vets need different SEO from general practice?
Yes, specialty SEO is genuinely different. Exotic, avian, equine, reptile, surgery, dental, oncology -- each has distinct query clusters and referral-based acquisition patterns that general-practice content simply doesn't reach. A dog-and-cat-optimised site is not going to rank for "avian vet Los Angeles" or "equine surgical specialist." The content architecture has to match the specialties.
How do you handle multi-doctor practices?
Doctor profile pages with credentials, specialisations, and Person schema build entity authority at the individual practitioner level. This matters for two reasons: it improves ranking for doctor-specific queries -- "Dr. Sarah Chen veterinary dermatologist" type searches -- and it helps with Google Knowledge Panel visibility for the doctors themselves. In practices with multiple specialists, this is often completely ignored.
What about emergency / after-hours visibility?
Emergency pages need three things done right: open-hours schema that accurately reflects emergency availability, a prominent click-to-call emergency line, and content written specifically for urgency -- not the same tone as a routine services page. Someone in a genuine pet emergency at 2am in Dallas needs to land on a page that immediately signals "we're open, here's the number, here's what to do." That page captures same-hour conversions that no other page on your site can.
What is the typical engagement cost?
Foundation work plus initial content build runs $10-18K. Ongoing monthly retainer is $3-6K. Specialty practices or multi-doctor clinics -- where the content architecture is more complex and the query surface is larger -- run $6-12K per month. Those ranges reflect actual scope, not arbitrary tiers.
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Whether it's a migration, a new build, or an SEO challenge — the Social Animal team would love to hear from you.