AI search versus traditional SEO for a healthcare practice: where to spend attention first
Traditional SEO still determines whether a practice shows up in Google's blue links and Maps results, and that work has not become optional. AI search — the answers generated by ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews — determines whether a practice gets named as the recommended option inside a conversational response, which depends on clear, structured, source-worthy content more than on link volume. A practice that wants new patients from both channels needs to maintain the first while starting the second now, because the second is where competitors with weaker sites can still get ahead of you.
How ranking differs from being named in an answer
Ranking in traditional search means your page appears somewhere on a results list that a person scrolls through and clicks. Being named in an AI answer means a generative engine has already read your site, decided your practice is a credible answer to a specific question, and stated your name directly to the user — often with no click at all. This second outcome is sometimes called a zero-click result, because the searcher gets the answer without visiting a website. For a healthcare practice, that means a patient can hear "Riverside Physical Therapy handles post-surgical rehab" inside a chat response without ever seeing your homepage. Optimizing for this requires content the AI model can extract and trust: plain-language descriptions of conditions treated, credentials, hours, and locations, written so a paragraph can be lifted whole and remain accurate.
The overlap between good SEO and good AEO
Search engine optimization (SEO) and answer engine optimization (AEO) — the practice of structuring content so AI tools can extract and cite it — are not competing strategies; they share the same foundation. Accurate business information, fast-loading pages, clear service descriptions, and genuine patient reviews help both a Google ranking algorithm and an AI model deciding what to cite. A practice does not need two separate content plans. It needs one set of clear, accurate, well-organized pages that happen to satisfy both a search index and a language model reading for facts.
Where a clinical practice sees the fastest return
A clinical practice sees the fastest return from fixing the pages that answer the questions patients actually type or speak before choosing a provider: "does this practice treat your condition," "do they take your insurance," "how soon can I get an appointment," and "where exactly are they located." These are also the questions AI tools try to answer on a patient's behalf, so a page that answers them clearly in plain sentences gets used by both a search crawler and a generative model. Practices that bury this information in PDFs, image-based menus, or vague marketing copy lose ground in both systems at once, while practices that state it plainly gain ground in both at once.
A sequence for updating an existing site
An existing practice website does not need to be rebuilt to compete in AI search; it needs a sequence of updates applied to the pages that already get traffic or should. Work through the site in this order, checking each item before moving to the next, so early fixes support the ones that follow rather than being undone by them.
- Confirm the basics are accurate everywhere. Practice name, address, phone number, hours, and accepted insurance should match exactly across the website, Google Business Profile, and any directory listing. Mismatches confuse both search engines and AI tools deciding which source to trust.
- Rewrite service pages in plain, direct language. Each condition or service the practice treats should have its own page with a clear explanation of what it is, who it is for, and what a visit involves. Avoid clinical jargon that a patient — or an AI model summarizing for a patient — would need to interpret.
- Add schema markup to key pages. Schema markup is a structured data format added to a webpage's code that tells search engines and AI tools exactly what a piece of content means — for example, marking a paragraph as a medical condition description or a phone number as the practice's primary contact. This makes extraction easier and more accurate.
- Consolidate scattered credibility signals. Reviews, provider credentials, and affiliations should be visible on the page itself, not only on third-party sites. AI tools weigh what they can find and verify quickly.
- Check how the site actually reads when summarized. Copy a service page's main paragraph and see whether it stands on its own as an accurate answer to the question a patient would ask. If it needs the rest of the page for context, revise it.
Each step in this sequence reduces the gap between what a human reader needs and what an AI model needs, since both are ultimately trying to extract the same accurate, specific information from the same page.
Run this diagnostic on your own site this week
Pick the three services or conditions your practice treats most often, and for each one, open a private browser window and ask an AI tool a plain question a patient would ask — for example, "who treats your condition near your city." Note whether your practice is named, whether the details given about it are accurate, and whether a competitor is named instead. Then open the matching page on your own website and read only its first two sentences: do they answer the same question as clearly as the AI's response did? Wherever the answer is no, that page is your starting point.