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A NO BRAINER FOR AESTHETIC CLINICS

Lisa Kelly explores the practical AI tools that are already helping aesthetic clinics save time, improve efficiency and unlock new revenue opportunities

Running an aesthetic clinic requires practitioners to wear multiple hats. Alongside delivering treatments, clinic owners are managing staff, marketing, compliance, finances and patient care, often leaving little time to explore emerging technologies or assess which innovations are genuinely worth adopting.

However, there is a growing array of new AI technologies now available to clinics that will help them generate more revenue, reduce costs, and greatly enhance the patient experience. As a clinic owner, you cannot afford to ignore this revolutions. If you look the other way as this advancement proceeds, you will seriously stunt your clinic’s growth and get left behind.

This is an exciting time for clinics to have access to technologies that were out of reach only a few years ago, at a cost/benefit price that is a no-brAIner. All you have to do is take a look.

The AI explosion is generating many players offering a variety of solutions that impact all aspects of the business cycle. We have summarised below the key solutions you should start with:-

GENERATING NEW BUSINESS

Website conversion

Your website’s core purpose was always to capture potential interest in the services your clinic offers, provide detailed information about your treatments and encourage them to act by using a booking button to arrange a consultation. Now you can embed an AI agent into your website that can chat or speak directly to your visitors, answering questions about their conditions and suggesting potential treatments you offer that could help them. The same AI Agent can recommend and help visitors find appropriate aftercare products in your online shop and offer bookings, discounts and promotions.

New patients from socials

AI agents can design, build and execute your social media strategy and manage any responses it generates, answering questions and making appointments.

Skin scans and projections

AI technology can be added to your website that can read an uploaded image of the patient’s skin issue, body shape, or the complete face and make an assessment of any potential issues, skin type or predict the potential results of a treatment on the condition in real time, then drive the patient to book a consultation.

CONVERTING AND BOOKING

Handling inbound inquiries

The more advanced patient management systems (PMS) can enable an AI assistant to intervene when a “book now button” is used to help the visitor find a treatment, a convenient time slot and process a deposit. AI specialist companies can now intercept and answer inbound calls to your clinic from new and existing patients, discuss their requirements, help them make an appointment and process a deposit. This means you are open 24/7, and for Solo practices, no more missed calls when you are with a patient or the time lost in subsequent follow-up calls.

RETAINING PATIENTS AND PROTECTING REVENUE

Customer retention/whitespace

Unsold treatment slots or “whitespace” in your calendar are unrealised opportunities. These can now be filled by AI Agents that can identify attendance patterns from data in your booking platform and contact patient that have lapsed or are due for follow-up treatments via email, text and over the phone using an avatar with your voice.

Consultation note taking

Manual note-taking and SOAP notes can now be fully automated. The AI agent listens and accurately records the conversation as it takes place, allowing the practitioner to fully focus on what is being said. At the consultation conclusion, the final notes can be summarised and uploaded directly into your PMS system, greatly reducing admin time and improving accuracy.

CONCLUSION

These are just some of the ways AI technology can help your clinic’s business. New solutions are arriving constantly. The barrier to entry is lower than you think. If an AI agent generates one new booking from a call you would have missed, fills a single slot that would otherwise go unsold, or gives you back an hour ordinarily lost to admin, it has already paid for itself many times over.

None of these tools replaces you or any member of your team. What they do is allow your staff to work more efficiently and for you to provide consistent customer service at times when you are not available.

The clinics that begin exploring this now will have a head start. The ones that wait will find the gap harder to close. You don’t need to adopt everything at once. Pick the one area of your business that costs you the most time or loses you the most opportunity, and start there. The technology will do the rest.

LISA KELLY

Lisa Kelly is the founder of Websites For Clinics by Salon Solutions, industry experts helping aesthetic clinics, doctors, dentists and nurses attract new clients and generate new bookings to grow their clinic business.

This article appears in Jul/Aug 2026

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This article appears in...
Jul/Aug 2026
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DEAR READERS
Welcome to the July/August issue of Aesthetic Medicine Magazine.
MEET THE EXPERTS
The Aesthetic Medicine editorial board’s clinical expertise and diverse range of specialities help ensure the magazine meets the needs of the readers. In this issue, we have received guidance from the following members:
HOT OFF THE PRESS
BCAM warns public over illegal and unregulated peptide injections
OUT & ABOUT
CIRCADIA UK’S MINISTRY OF SKIN 2026 Knebworth House, Stevenage
GETTING TO KNOW DR AHMED EL HOUSSIENY
After beginning his career in one of medicine’s most demanding specialties, Dr Ahmed El Houssieny has built a successful clinic, training academy and reputation as a leading educator in aesthetics. He speaks to editor Kezia Parkins about governance, business, education and why caution still matters in a fast-moving sector.
THE RISE OF THE ‘MINI BLEPH’
Dr Richard Devine explains why blepharoplasty is becoming a more mainstream option for patients looking to refresh tired eyes and how he achieves comparable results without surgery.
Case study: COMBINATION REGENERATIVE HAIR RESTORATION
Natalie Clendinning showcases hair restoration outcomes with microneedling, exosomes, and polynucleotide injections.
THE NEW PREVENTION ERA
Anna Dobbie investigates how longevity medicine, advanced diagnostic technology and personalised health strategies are shifting the sector’s focus toward preventative treatments
CUTTING-EDGE CLINICS
From bookings and marketing to reporting and patient communication, AI is helping clinics work smarter, reduce admin and drive growth.
SCALP MATTERS
Why the scalp should be treated with the same clinical seriousness as the skin
IS AI CHANGING THE RISK LANDSCAPE IN AESTHETICS?
AI is changing aesthetics – but responsibility still sits with us, writes Eddie Hooker , founder and CEO of Hamilton Fraser
DOES A FACELIFT REALLY SLIP? SETTING PATIENT EXPECTATIONS FOR THE LONG TERM
Addressing the common patient concern of post-surgical ‘slippage,’ Dr. Roberto Viel explores the realities of tissue settling, the importance of lift vectors, and the strategic maintenance required to ensure long-term rejuvenation.
NOT ALL PRP IS THE SAME
Claudia McGloin explains how to understand leukocyte-rich and leukocyte-poor preparations
TESTOSTERONE TRUTH
Dr Ginni Mansberg examines what science says about testosterone and the skin, separating evidence from trends
THE HUMAN TOUCH
As artificial intelligence becomes more and more embedded in the patient journey, Vicky Eldridge asks, are we losing sight of what really matters in aesthetic practice?
OVER “DONE”
Emma Wedgwood looks at how regenerative treatments are shifting aesthetic medicine away from correction and towards restoring definition, structure and long-term skin health.
MEDICAL-GRADE MYTH
Is “medical-grade” cosmetics a term without definition?
STAYING HUMAN IN AESTHETICS
In an increasingly transactional industry, staying connected to the people behind the treatments has never been more important. Julie Scott reflects on compassion, boundaries and the value of remaining fully present in aesthetic practice.
STANDARDS OR SUGGESTIONS?
Everyone supports high standards, until they become inconvenient. Amy Bird examines why standards without enforcement are simply suggestions
A NO BRAINER FOR AESTHETIC CLINICS
Lisa Kelly explores the practical AI tools that are already helping aesthetic clinics save time, improve efficiency and unlock new revenue opportunities
LEGAL CHECKLIST
Peter Kouwenberg, explains the key legal considerations aesthetic practitioners should address before introducing new services.
HOW SHOULD EVOLVING LASER REGULATIONS IMPACT MY CLINIC’S APPROACH TO SKIN RESURFACING?
How should evolving laser regulations impact my clinic’s approach to skin resurfacing? he regulatory landscape for aesthetic treatments
HOW CAN OMEGA-3 SUPPORT TREATMENT OUTCOMES?
How can omega-3 support treatment outcomes?
THE RELIABLE ONES
Anna Miller answers why the people you depend on most may be carrying more than you realise
AUTHENTIC DESIGN
Does your clinic truly mirror the brand you promote online? Katie Thomas explains why crafting a clinical environment that aligns with your marketing ensures clients get everything they expect – and more
TACKLING PROFESSIONAL ISOLATION IN AESTHETIC MEDICINE
As aesthetic medicine continues to mature, many practitioners still work in relative isolation compared with their colleagues in traditional healthcare settings. Dr Jordan Faulkner argues that stronger professional networks, mentorship and collaborative learning are essential to improving governance, clinician wellbeing and patient safety across the specialty.
ALUMIER MD INTELLIRET BOOST PEEL
Editorial assistant, Connie Cooper tried the new Alumier MD IntelliRET Boost peel within a customised skin peel treatment, addressing breakout prone skin
TEOXANE BABYGLOW AT COSMETIC SKIN CLINIC
Editor Kezia Parkins got the opportunity to try Teoxane’s newest treatment, babyGLOW™, at the Cosmetic Skin Clinic.
PRODUCT NEWS
Medik8 Medik8’s Exo-PDRN Prismatic+ Pro Concentrate is a
5 MINUTES WITH EMILY-LOUISE VARNFIELD
Emily-Louise Varnfield , founder of The Beaute Group , discusses the future of aesthetic technology, the importance of clinical outcomes and the opportunities shaping the industry.
5 tech-forward practitioners to follow
These five practitioners are driving conversations in the increasingly technology driven industry
Ask Alex
“Everyone on TikTok seems to just talk now. Should I be ‘yapping’ too?”
Looking for back issues?
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