I’ve spent 20 years in plastic surgery marketing. Every surgeon I worked with became the dominant practice in their market. Not “did well.” Not “saw improvement.” Became the market leader.
That’s not a boast. It’s a filter. If you’re looking for someone to validate the marketing you’re already doing, stop reading. If you want to know what actually works, here’s everything I know.
The #1 mistake: copying what other practices do
You know what happens when I sit down with a new surgeon? They show me what their competitor is doing and say, “We should do that.”
No. You shouldn’t.
You’re looking at someone else’s marketing without seeing their numbers. That Instagram account with 50K followers? Check how many consultation requests it produces. I’ll bet you it’s close to zero. That fancy website with the full-screen video? Probably loads in 8 seconds and drives people away before they ever see the contact form.
The practices you think are killing it usually aren’t. They’re just spending more visibly. There’s a difference between looking busy and making money. Activity does NOT equal progress. Read that again.
The surgeon who’s actually winning? You probably can’t even tell from looking at his marketing. His website might look simple. His social media might be quiet. But his phone doesn’t stop ringing because he’s #1 on Google for every procedure people search for in his city.
Your website is a conversion tool, not a portfolio
Surgeons love beautiful websites. I get it. You’re in aesthetics. You appreciate design. But your website has one job: turn visitors into consultation requests. That’s it.
Here’s what kills conversion rates:
Slow load times. If your site takes more than 3 seconds to load, you’re losing 40% of visitors before they see a single word. According to Google’s own data, bounce rate increases 32% as page load goes from 1 to 3 seconds. Your full-screen 4K background video is costing you patients.
No clear call to action above the fold. The first thing someone sees on your homepage should tell them what to do next. Not your mission statement. Not your credentials. A clear path to booking a consultation.
Too many menu options. Every link that doesn’t lead toward a consultation is a link that leads away from one. Your website doesn’t need 47 pages. It needs a clear path from “I’m interested” to “I’m booked.”
A gallery page that’s a dead end. Before-and-after photos are critical in plastic surgery. But if your gallery is just a wall of images with no context, no procedure information, and no way to book, it’s a museum, not a marketing tool. I wrote about why most before-and-after galleries kill conversions and how to fix them.
The best plastic surgery websites I’ve built follow the same structure: hero that speaks to the patient’s desire, social proof (results, reviews, credentials), procedure information that answers real questions, and multiple paths to book. Nothing else.
SEO for plastic surgeons: what ranks, what’s a waste
SEO is the single highest-ROI channel for plastic surgery marketing. Not social media. Not print. Not even paid ads in the long run. SEO. I break this down in detail in my plastic surgery SEO guide, but here’s the summary.
Why? Because when someone types “rhinoplasty surgeon Toronto” into Google, she’s already decided she wants the procedure. She’s looking for the right surgeon. If you’re the first name she sees, you have a massive advantage. That’s buying intent. You can’t manufacture that on Instagram.
What actually ranks:
- Procedure pages with real depth. Not 200-word summaries copied from a medical textbook. Real pages, 1,000+ words, that answer every question a patient has about the procedure. Recovery time. Cost ranges. What to expect at the consultation. Who’s a good candidate. Real before-and-after photos with context.
- Location-specific content. “Breast augmentation Toronto” and “breast augmentation Mississauga” are different searches with different results. If you serve multiple areas, you need content for each one. Not duplicate pages with the city name swapped. Real content.
- Consistent content publishing. Google rewards sites that are active. One well-researched article per month about a topic your patients actually search for will do more than 50 thin blog posts about “summer skincare tips.”
What’s a waste of SEO budget:
- Blog posts nobody searches for. “Dr. Smith Attends Conference” is not SEO content. It’s a diary entry. Every piece of content should target a keyword real patients are Googling.
- Backlink schemes. If your SEO agency is buying links from random blogs, you’re paying for a penalty. Google has gotten very good at identifying artificial links. Focus on earning real mentions.
- Over-optimizing your homepage. Your homepage should rank for your brand name and your primary market. Don’t try to cram 30 keywords onto it.
We took My Plastic Surgeon to #1 in both organic and paid search. That didn’t happen by gaming the system. It happened by building the most useful, most trusted content in the market and then making sure Google could find it.
Google Ads vs Facebook Ads for plastic surgery
This is the question I get asked more than any other. Here’s the honest answer:
Google Ads for surgical procedures. Facebook Ads for injectable treatments and maybe awareness. I wrote a full breakdown of Google Ads for plastic surgeons if you want the detailed budget and campaign structure.
Google Ads work for surgery because the intent is there. Someone searching “facelift cost” is close to a decision. You’re catching her when she’s actively looking. Expected cost-per-lead for surgical procedures: $75-250 depending on the procedure and market. Competitive cities like Toronto, Miami, or LA will be on the higher end.
Facebook Ads are different. Nobody’s scrolling through their feed thinking about a tummy tuck. Facebook can create interest, but it’s a long road from “that’s interesting” to “I’ll book a consultation for a $12,000 procedure.” For surgical leads from Facebook, expect cost-per-lead of $30-75, but the lead quality is significantly worse. You’ll book maybe 10-15% of those into consults, versus 30-40% from Google.
Where Facebook shines: BOTOX, fillers, skin treatments. Lower commitment. Lower price point. More impulse-friendly. If injectable marketing is a big part of your practice, read my Botox marketing ideas for specific tactics. A well-targeted Facebook campaign for BOTOX in a mid-size market can produce leads at $15-30 each, and the conversion rate is much better because the decision is smaller.
Budget ranges that actually produce results:
- New practice, single location: $3K-5K/month in Google Ads minimum. Below that, you won’t have enough data to optimize.
- Established practice wanting to grow: $8K-15K/month across Google and Facebook, weighted 70/30 toward Google.
- Aggressive growth: $20K+/month. But only if your website converts and your phones are handled properly. Spending this much with a bad website or bad phone handling is like running a fire hose into a sieve.
Reputation and reviews: the growth lever nobody talks about
I know a surgeon in New Jersey who was technically brilliant. Board-certified. Fellowship-trained. Beautiful results. And he was struggling to fill his schedule.
His problem? 12 Google reviews, two of which were from angry patients he never responded to. Meanwhile, the mediocre surgeon down the street had 300+ reviews with a 4.8 average. Guess who patients chose?
Reviews are not a nice-to-have. They’re a requirement.
Here’s what to do:
- Ask every happy patient for a review. Every single one. Your staff should hand them a card or send a text with a direct link to your Google review page within 24 hours of their appointment.
- Respond to every review. Good ones get a genuine thank you. Bad ones get a professional, non-defensive response that shows you take feedback seriously. Never argue. Never reveal patient information.
- Set a target. If you’re under 100 reviews, your goal should be 10 new reviews per month until you hit 200. After that, 5/month to stay fresh.
Skin Vitality Medical Clinic went from the #4 Botox provider in Canada to #1. That didn’t happen just through advertising. It happened because patients trusted them, reviewed them, and referred their friends. Reputation compounds.
Content marketing: why most surgeon blogs fail
Your blog fails because you’re writing for yourself instead of your patients.
Nobody cares about the annual aesthetic surgery conference you attended. Nobody wants to read a 300-word post about “the importance of choosing a board-certified surgeon.” They care about how much a procedure costs. How long the recovery takes. What the scars look like at 6 months. Whether it hurts.
Answer the questions patients are too embarrassed to ask their friends. That’s your content strategy. Every article should target a search query that real patients type into Google. If you can’t name the exact search, don’t write the post.
The format that works for plastic surgery content:
- Start with the patient’s concern, not the clinical description
- Include real recovery timelines (not the optimistic ones)
- Show before-and-after photos with context (age, procedure details, time since surgery)
- Address cost honestly, even if it’s a range
- End with a clear path to book a consultation
One well-researched, 1,500-word article per month will outperform a weekly 300-word fluff post every single time.
The conversion bottleneck nobody talks about
This is the part where I make you uncomfortable.
Your front desk is losing you money. Maybe a lot of money. This problem is so widespread I wrote an entire piece on the phone call that costs you $50,000 a year.
We track calls for every practice we work with. Here’s what we hear on a regular basis:
- Phones ringing 6+ times before someone picks up
- “Can I put you on hold?” followed by dead air
- Callers asking about a procedure and getting a price quote with zero attempt to book them
- Staff who sound annoyed, rushed, or bored
- Voicemail during business hours
Every one of those is a lost patient. Not a lost lead. A lost patient. That woman already decided she wanted the procedure. She already found you on Google. She already read your reviews. She picked up the phone, which is the hardest part. And your front desk killed it.
I’ve seen practices double their consultation bookings without changing a single thing about their marketing. The only thing that changed was how the phone was answered. The consultation itself is where you win or lose the patient — fixing that one step in the process can be worth more than your entire ad budget.
If you do nothing else after reading this, record your phone calls for one week and listen to ten of them. You’ll find the problem faster than any marketing audit.
Real results from real practices
I don’t deal in hypotheticals. Here are surgeons and clinics I’ve worked with:
Gartner Plastic Surgery was a single struggling location in New Jersey. After rebuilding their entire marketing operation, they expanded to 3 offices including a location in Manhattan. That’s not a website redesign success story. That’s a business transformation built on search dominance and operational fixes.
Skin Vitality Medical Clinic was the #4 Botox provider in Canada. We made them #1. Not through some clever branding campaign. Through relentless focus on search visibility, review generation, and content that answered every question a patient could have about injectable treatments. You can see the full details in the Skin Vitality case study.
Toronto Cosmetic Clinic went from 4 employees and under $100K in revenue to 44 employees and multiple seven figures. We owned their market for 6 consecutive years. Every search result. Every top position. See the Toronto Cosmetic Clinic case study for the full breakdown.
Every one of these practices had the same starting point: good clinical work, bad marketing, and phones that weren’t being answered properly.
Your 90-day plan
Stop trying to do everything. Here’s the sequence that works:
Days 1-30: Fix the foundation.
- Record every phone call. Listen to at least 10 per week. Train your staff on how to handle price questions (answer them, then book the consult).
- Audit your website for speed, mobile experience, and clear calls to action. Fix anything broken.
- Claim and fully optimize your Google Business Profile. Add real photos. Start asking every patient for a review.
Days 31-60: Build your content.
- Create or rewrite your top 5 procedure pages. Each one should be 1,000+ words, answer real patient questions, include before-and-after photos, and have a clear booking path.
- Publish 2 long-form articles targeting keywords your ideal patients actually search for.
- Set up basic call tracking so you can tie leads back to their source.
Days 61-90: Turn on paid traffic.
- Launch Google Ads campaigns for your 3-5 highest-value procedures. Start with $100-150/day.
- Build a review generation system: automated text or email to patients after visits with a direct link to your Google profile.
- Review your data. Which procedures produce the best return? Which keywords convert? Kill what doesn’t work. Scale what does.
By day 90, you should know your cost per consultation for each procedure, your front desk conversion rate, and exactly where your money is going. Most practices have been operating for years and don’t know any of these numbers.
The bottom line
Plastic surgery marketing isn’t complicated. It’s just done badly by most agencies because they sell what’s easy to deliver (social media posts, branding packages, logo redesigns) instead of what actually produces patients (search dominance, reputation building, operational fixes).
Every surgeon I’ve worked with who committed to this approach became the top practice in their market. Not because I’m magic. Because the competition is doing it wrong, and the bar is embarrassingly low.
If your practice isn’t growing the way you want it to, you don’t need another marketing agency. You need the right strategy executed in the right order by someone who actually knows where the money comes from.
Get in touch and let’s look at your numbers. That’s always the first step.