23/01/2025
Some agencies charge $10K/month for what they call "custom growth strategies."
In reality? Itโs the same recycled playbook handed out to every client:
- Generic local SEO audits
- Copy-paste ad templates
- Proven funnels that donโt fit your audience
- Vanity metrics instead of actual meaningful results
What do you get?
- Fewer patient inquiries
- Higher ad spend = lower ROI
- Growth that stalls, if it happens at all
The bottom line is there will be no measurable growth for the clinic.
All while paying $5-$15k a month.
Hereโs the TRUTH...
Real agencies craft strategies for each of their clients to fit their needs. โ
Pretender agencies sell templated systems.โ
BEFORE you trust another agency with your practice, look for these green flags.
Real growth systems are:
โ
Hyper-personalized for your clinic's location, audience, and services
โ
Focused on driving patient leadsโnot just clicks
โ
Adaptable to whatโs working, not stuck in a 12-month contract
Healthcare clinics & medical practices donโt thrive on cookie-cutter solutions.
You need precision, data, and strategies that are tailored to your goals, not some agencyโs roadmap.
If youโve ever been burned by an agency promising the moon in their demo call but
delivering template insights that don't mean anything, itโs time to look for these before you choose your agency.
โญDo they provide custom insights based on your target market?
โญDo they run flexible campaigns that evolve with results?
โญDo you get the metrics that matter: more inquiries, better patients, and consistent realistic growth
โญDo they put their money where their mouth is i.e.; provide a realistic guarantee?
Here's the truth.
Growing clinics is HARD.
It takes a ton of effort to make it more predictable, and less stressful.
Just like growing a plant, it takes time, patience, care and love.
Before you invest your hard-earned money with any agency, make sure they are ready to put in the effort and curate custom strategies to fit your exact needs and are willing to do whatever it takes to achieve that goal.
What's the point of partnering with them, if they can't keep their promises?