ADVICE
ASK ALEX
“I’m the face of my clinic and I’m exhausted - how do I market without burning out?
It’s Sunday night. You should be off your phone. You’re not. You’re scrolling, and everyone else’s clinic looks like it’s having a brilliant week.Slick Reels. A doctor you trained alongside on a panel somewhere. Perfectly lit treatment rooms. And there you are, knackered, and Monday is already booked solid. When you’re the practitioner and the brand, marketing isn’t a separate task; it’s another shift on top of the one you’ve just done. So let’s ask the proper question. What actually works when there’s only one of you?
THE “ALWAYS ON” MYTH
Posting every day sounds like the plan, until you’ve actually tried it for a month. Then it becomes a rushed Reel filmed between patients, captioned in the car park and posted with a wince.
The solo practitioners I see doing well long-term aren’t usually the ones posting hardest. They’ve stopped treating social as the whole job. Daily posting is a content team’s game, or maybe a brand-new clinic’s game when nothing else is built yet.
For a single-handed practitioner already booked out weeks in advance, it’s the fastest route to resenting the part of your business that’s meant to be growing it.
BITS THAT WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP
Take your reviews. At 11pm on a Tuesday while you’re asleep, somebody is reading them and deciding whether to book a consultation. That’s marketing doing its job without you.
That’s the model. The bits of your marketing that keep you earning while you’re busy are usually the bits you actually own.
A treatment page written properly once will keep ranking on Google for years. A monthly email to your patient list will almost always outperform a week of stories, because that list already trusts you and you’re landing in a much calmer inbox than the chaos of Instagram.
Your Google Business Profile decides whether you even appear when someone searches “skin clinic near me” on the train home.
None of these need feeding daily. They need building once, properly, with a bit of tending to now and then.
Social has its place, but it’s the most exhausting bit of your marketing and it dates the fastest. A Reel that did brilliantly in September is invisible by October. That well-written treatment page from last year, is still pulling people in. Lean into the assets you actually own.
BATCH THE SOCIAL YOU DO KEEP POSTING
Once you’ve taken the pressure off daily posting, batching becomes realistic. And time blocking is the difference between social being a drag and social being one day’s work a month. Block out one afternoon and film four or five short pieces-to-camera covering the questions you answer in consultation every single week, and that’s four weeks of content before the month has even started. Planned content also tends to be better content. You’re rested, you’ve actually thought about what you want to say, and you’re not squeezing it in between a follow up appointment and a delivery.
You can hear the difference.
THE BITS THAT DON’T NEED YOUR FACE
Which bits of your marketing genuinely need you, and which bits can anyone do?
Only you can do:
Pieces-to-camera and voice notes. Patients are booking because of your face and the way you explain things. That can’t be outsourced and shouldn’t be.
Anything that needs your clinical perspective. A blog post on a new modality, a reply to a tricky enquiry, a story about why you trained in something specific.
Capturing real-time moments in-clinic. The new device arriving, the morning set-up, a snippet of a treatment going beautifully. You can’t outsource being there. Pretty much everything else can be handed off. Captions from your bullet points, scheduling posts, replying to comments, pulling analytics, setting up email templates, tidying treatment pages, editing the footage you filmed last week.
That’s all work someone else could be doing while you’re with patients.
A few hours of freelancer time a month changes the maths completely. You don’t have to commit to a full in-house hire or a big agency retainer to feel it.
THE LONG GAME VS BURNOUT
I’ve got to know a lot of solo practitioners over the years. The ones who are still around, still loving the work and still fully booked, aren’t the ones who treated Instagram like a second job. They figured out early which bits of marketing actually move the needle, built those properly, and stopped feeling so guilty about everything else.
If you take a few weeks off and your clinic still hums along, that’s not luck. That’s the marketing finally working for you instead of the other way round.
ALEX BUGG
Alex Bugg works for Web Marketing Clinic, a family-run digital agency, which specialises in medical aesthetics. The business builds websites and delivers marketing campaigns for doctors, nurses, dentists, distributors and brands. Contact her at: alex@webmarketingclinic.co.uk or follow her on Instagram: @webmarketingclinic