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Crack the tweakement algorithm

In 2026, understanding Google and AI-driven search optimisation will be essential for keeping your clinic at the top of clients’ search results.

Each month in 2025, as many as 10,000 people typed ‘Aesthetic clinic near me’ into Google. Just as many people were searching ‘fillers’ and ‘microneedling’ ‘near me’, a massive 100,000 were actively looking for ‘lip fillers near me’. For every person searching ‘near me’, thousands more are typing the name of their town -‘dermal fillers in Manchester’, ‘microneedling Brighton’, ‘aesthetic clinic Richmond’.

Those are potential clients who know what they want, they just don’t know where they should go for it.

Clinics looking to get those potential clients through their door should make getting to the top of Google a business priority.

GET ON THE GOOGLE MAP

Many clinic owners assume the Google Map is all about their website, but the Google Business Page (GBP) has the biggest impact, alongside a number of other ranking factors.

One of those - which you can’t change - is your physical location. Google has its own centre point for every town, and businesses closer to that centre have a higher chance of appearing at the top. But with a bit of time and strategy, you can still make a meaningful difference.

• Claim your listing and make sure every field is complete. Check that you’re using the correct categories.

• Google reviews are a clinic’s best friend. Aim for quality and quantity. While many aesthetic clients are reluctant to share their secrets, positive reviews that include the treatment name are invaluable.

• Don’t ‘set and forget’. Keep your business description, opening hours and photos up to date.

• Get into the habit of adding posts to your GBP. These can be reworked social posts or simple clinic updates.

• Make sure your website reflects the categories and services on your GBP.

• Pay attention to how people interact with your profile. The more engagement you attract, the better you tend to rank.

• Build reputation signals elsewhere online – local business links, press mentions, directory listings and citations all support your prominence.

ORGANIC SEARCH RESULTS

Below the Map Pack, Google switches from where you are to what your website says.

This is where many clinics fall short because they don’t give Google the right information to understand exactly what they do; or match the searcher’s query.

To give their website the best chance of ranking in the coveted top three organic results, clinics should:

Create treatment-specific pages. Avoid marketing names like ‘skin rejuvenation’ or ‘Glow Lift’ and use the exact words people search for: microneedling, skin boosters, chemical peels, RF microneedling, laser hair removal.

If you work with brands patients recognise – IPL, Profhilo, Sculptra – make that clear too.

Answer the questions clients actually ask. What is it? Who is it for? How many treatments do I need? Is there downtime? How much does it cost? Pages that answer these directly tend to rank for more queries. Adding an FAQs section is a simple way to achieve this.

Include strong location signals. If you want to appear for ‘aesthetic clinic Richmond’, your site must say ‘aesthetic clinic in Richmond’ in places Google can read – page titles, headers and body copy. Make sure your site is well-structured. Clear page titles, descriptive headers, internal links between related treatments and basic schema all help Google understand your clinic.

Ensure your site is mobile-friendly and fast. Most aesthetic searches happen on phones. Use PageSpeed

Insights to check loading times – slow sites often fall down the rankings.

The winning combination is a website that looks good enough to stop people hitting the back button and structured well enough to tell Google exactly what you do and where you do it.

HOW AI HAS CHANGED SEARCHING

Being found online isn’t just about Google anymore.

Instagram and TikTok have become search engines and AI is now transforming the landscape entirely. You’ll have noticed ‘AI overviews’ appear in your search, but you may not realise that people are also using platforms like AI to directly ask where they should go for their tweakments.

AI search doesn’t behave like Google at all. Instead of showing a list of links, people ask AI direct questions:

• “Where should I go for microneedling?”

• “Who’s best for skin boosters in my area?”

• “Which clinic is safest for Botox?” AI tools then scan the internet and build an answer, often recommending a specific clinic (and a backup plan) by name.

Interestingly, ChatGPT prioritises medical aesthetic practices over beauty salons for advanced treatments and will only show a salon or beauty therapist if they can demonstrate exceptionally strong signals.

To appear in AI recommendations, clinics need to give it the exact trust signals it looks for. Some of these overlap with Google, but others are more safety-led:

Visible qualifications and safety info AI prioritises providers who show training, devices, modalities, contraindications and aftercare. It wants reassurance that you know what you’re doing.

Consistent information across the web Mismatches make AI wary. A clinic’s name, address and phone number should always be used consistently and it’s essential that the website and GBP have the same information.

Client sentiment AI is looking at what’s being said about your clinic all over the internet – not just Google reviews.

Build your profile That could mean working with local businesses to be featured as a business they recommend; you could also work with PR to get featured in trusted publications or look to enter awards to develop your trust signals.

The way patients find aesthetic treatments is changing fast, but the core message is simple: clarity wins.

The clinics who take this seriously will keep showing up – whenever and however – someone searches. And in a competitive market, that’s what puts you in front of the people already looking for exactly what you offer.

KATE WOODS

Kate Woods runs KOR Digital and has been working with hair, beauty and aesthetics businesses since 2007. She’s built a reputation for honest, practical guidance — helping owners get found online, make better use of their websites and marketing, and attract clients who genuinely value what they do.

This article appears in January 2026

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This article appears in...
January 2026
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