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WHY CLINICS NEED TO THINK LIKE CREATORS IN 2026

As Meta shifts reach towards original creator-led content, aesthetic clinics may need to rethink how they communicate expertise, education and trust online.

For years, aesthetic clinics have approached Instagram as a digital shop window. Polished graphics, treatment promotions and curated feeds became standard practice. But according to Meta, the platforms are changing – and so is the content that performs best.

Recently, Adam Mosseri reinforced Instagram’s focus on prioritising original creator-led content, with greater emphasis on personality, expertise and authentic engagement over recycled or overly promotional material. Whilst this may sound like a concern for influencers and creators, it has significant implications for aesthetic clinics too.

Patients are no longer connecting with faceless brands in the same way they once did. Social media users are overwhelmed with content and increasingly selective about who they trust. In aesthetics especially, patients are looking for reassurance, education and human connection long before they enquire about treatment.

This is why clinics need to stop thinking purely as businesses online and start thinking more like creators.

That does not mean dancing trends or sacrificing professionalism. It means understanding that platforms like Instagram are increasingly rewarding content that feels original, informative and personal. Educational videos, practitioner insight and founder-led communication are often outperforming overly polished promotional posts.

Patients want to understand the person behind the clinic. They want to hear a practitioner’s perspective, understand their approach and feel confident in their expertise. A promotional offer may help populate a feed visually, but it does little to establish long-term authority or patient trust.

Clinics performing well online are often the ones communicating beyond the treatment itself. They educate, explain and answer the questions patients are already searching for.

This also reflects wider changes in patient behaviour. Today’s aesthetic patient is more informed, cautious and research-driven than ever before. Before booking, they are often consuming weeks – sometimes months – of online content, subconsciously deciding who feels credible, trustworthy and aligned with their values.

For aesthetic professionals, this presents a huge opportunity. Clinics already possess the expertise patients are searching for; the challenge is learning how to communicate that expertise in a way that platforms now favour.

So, what does this look like in practice? For many clinics, it starts with moving away from purely promotional content and focusing more on visibility of expertise. This could include practitioners sharing their perspective on treatment trends, answering patient questions or discussing why certain treatments may – or may not – be appropriate for different individuals.

Founder-led content is also becoming increasingly important. Patients connect with people far more than logos, and clinics allowing personality and professionalism to coexist online are often building stronger engagement as a result.

Social media is no longer simply about visibility. It is about connection, education and trust. As Meta continues to prioritise creator-led content, clinics embracing a more human, insight-driven approach to marketing are likely to be the ones continuing to grow organically in an increasingly competitive industry.

For more marketing insights, industry trends and practical strategies tailored to aesthetic The Aesthetics Code – a community designed to help clinics grow through smarter, education-led marketing.

Scan the QR code to join professionals, join

LIANNE SYKES

Lianne Sykes is a marketing specialist within the aesthetics industry and founder of Quirky Frog. Working across both clinics and brands, she specialises in patient communication, social media strategy and brand positioning, helping aesthetic businesses build authority, trust and long-term growth through education-led marketing.

This article is in collaboration with The Aesthetics Code.

This article appears in June 2026

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This article appears in...
June 2026
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DEAR READERS
The June issue celebrates pride, so we’ve placed
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CONTENT COMPLIANCE
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