AMY BIRD
I MISS WHEN PRACTITIONERS LOOKED LIKE PEOPLE... AND ACTED LIKE HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONALS
Amy Bird reflects on the pre-digital roots of credibility and why the aesthetics industry is returning to its professional foundations
There was a time in aesthetics when practitioners were recognised not by their follower count, but by their professionalism. I remember those who I learnt from, saw the standard ooze from them. Before the ring lights. Before the viral dances. Before consultations became content.
Patients walked into clinics looking for reassurance, knowledge, safety and trust. Not entertainment. But somewhere along the way, parts of our industry and sector seem to have forgotten that.
Now, let me be clear, evolution is not the problem. Marketing is not the problem. Social media is not the enemy. These platforms have transformed businesses, improved accessibility and opened conversations around confidence, ageing and self-care in ways we could never have imagined years ago. Again, I have said it before and always will, there is a difference between visibility and credibility.
INDIVIDUALITY OVER CONFORMITY
There was also a time when practitioners looked like people. Real people. Clinicians. Professionals. Individuals with experience etched into them, not filtered out of them.
Today, we are surrounded by identical faces, identical poses and identical messaging. Ironically, in an industry built around individuality, we have somehow created conformity.
And patients are noticing. I hear it, I see it each time a new patient walks in and I ask about previous treatments. Increasingly, people are not searching for the loudest clinic or the most dramatic transformation. They are looking for someone they can trust. Someone grounded. Someone who listens more than they sell. Someone who makes them feel safe rather than inadequate. Also, a someone, not a high street chain. Because despite the glamour often associated with aesthetics, this is still healthcare.
We are dealing with psychology, vulnerability, body image, ageing, confidence and, at times, profound emotional distress. Patients do not always arrive wanting “bigger lips” or “sharper cheeks.” Sometimes they arrive carrying grief, divorce, burnout, menopause, illness or years of putting themselves last. That responsibility should humble all of us, surely?
Aesthetic medicine should never become so consumed by trends that we forget the privilege of what we do. Every consultation is an exchange of trust. Every treatment decision carries ethical weight. Every patient deserves to feel like a person, not a transaction or a piece of content.
THE RESURGENCE OF PROFESSIONALISM AND CREDIBILITY
Professionalism is not outdated. It is not boring. And it certainly should not be viewed as less successful. In fact, I would argue that professionalism is becoming the differentiator and it is about time to reverse back.
Why? Patients are becoming more informed, more cautious and far more aware of over-treatment, poor practice and unrealistic beauty standards. They are looking beyond curated grids and asking deeper questions:
Who is medically qualified? Who will tell me no? Who prioritises long-term outcomes over trends? Who behaves like a healthcare professional both online and in clinic?
As expected, the same shift is now happening commercially too. For years, KOL status became one of the most sought-after labels in aesthetics. Being aligned with brands or pharmaceutical companies was often viewed as the ultimate marker of success and influence, but even that landscape is changing.
Companies and pharma are becoming far more discerning about who truly represents their values, products and reputation. Visibility alone is no longer enough. Follower count alone is no longer enough and neither is who spends every penny on PR from the outset. Because influence without credibility is becoming increasingly risky not just for brands, but for patient trust and for the reputation of the industry as a whole.
We are starting to see a move away from popularity alone and back toward professionalism, ethics, education and substance.
Brands are recognising that the loudest voice in the room is not always the most respected. That being constantly visible online does not automatically translate to clinical excellence. That patients are paying far closer attention to authenticity than many people realise.
Personally, I think that is a positive shift. The most valuable voices in aesthetics should not simply be the most visible. They should be the people educating responsibly, advancing standards, treating ethically and contributing something meaningful to the profession. Because true leadership is not built on filters, followers or self appointed titles. It is built on trust and perhaps that is where the industry is finally finding its balance again.
Quiet confidence is replacing performance, natural results are replacing exaggeration, and credibility is beginning to matter more than clout, maybe people are simply tired of perfection?
Personally, I miss when practitioners looked human. I miss when expertise spoke louder than aesthetics. I miss when professionalism was assumed rather than marketed, but I also believe we now have an opportunity to bring that balance back.
To embrace modern business without losing medical integrity, to remain visible without becoming performative, to build successful clinics without compromising professionalism and to remember that the most powerful thing a practitioner can offer is not transformation, but trust.
Bird’s THE WORD
Every issue, Amy Bird, our aesthetic nurse on the inside, reflects on life within the sector
AMY BIRD
Amy Bird RGN NMP is an award-winning nurse prescriber, speaker, trainer and KOLwith more than a decade of full time experience in medical aesthetics. She is lead nurse at her practice, KAST Medical Aesthetics in Cheshire, and recently became chair of BAMAN. She is a passionate advocate for best practice, standards and patient safety.