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AI Search GuidePsychiatry Practices

How to evaluate whether your psychiatry practice is visible in AI search

A step-by-step way for psychiatry practice owners to test whether ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity recommend them to prospective patients, and what to do if they don't.

· 5 minute read

The simplest way to check psychiatry practice AI visibility is to open ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity and ask each one the same question a prospective patient would type, such as "who are psychiatrists near your city that accept new patients." If your practice name shows up with accurate details, you're visible. If a competitor appears instead, or your listing is outdated, you have work to do.

A simple way to test your current AI visibility

Testing AI visibility means typing the same handful of realistic search phrases into multiple answer engines and recording what each one returns. This is not a one-time check. AI answer engines pull from directories, review sites, and your own web pages, so results shift as those sources change. A repeatable test, run monthly, tells you whether your practice is trending toward being recommended or fading out of view.

Start by listing the phrases a new patient might actually use: their location, the type of care they need (medication management, therapy referrals, a specific condition category), and insurance or telehealth preferences. Run each phrase in ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity, and also check Google's AI Overviews when they appear. Keep a simple spreadsheet with the date, the tool, the exact prompt, and whether your practice was mentioned, ranked, or omitted entirely.

The prompts to run on each answer engine

The prompts worth testing mimic how a real patient searches, not how a marketer searches. Broad prompts like "best psychiatrist in your city" matter less than specific ones tied to logistics: accepting new patients, telehealth availability, insurance networks, and appointment wait times. These specific prompts are what AI tools use to decide which practices to surface first.

Useful prompt categories include:

  • Location plus service: "psychiatrist in your city taking new patients this month"
  • Insurance-specific: "psychiatry practices in your city that accept your insurance name"
  • Format-specific: "telehealth psychiatry providers in your state"
  • Comparison prompts: "compare psychiatry practices in your city for wait times and availability"
  • Reputation prompts: "what do patients say about your practice name"

Run each prompt in more than one session, since answer engines sometimes vary responses. Note whether your practice's name, address, phone number, and website match what's listed elsewhere online. Inconsistent information across directories is one of the most common reasons a practice gets skipped even when it technically exists in the data the AI tool has access to.

What a good result versus a bad result looks like

A good result names your practice specifically, states accurate details like accepted insurance or appointment availability, and places you among a short list of relevant options. A bad result either omits your practice entirely, lists outdated information such as a former address, or surfaces a competitor with more complete and consistent online listings. The gap between these two outcomes usually comes down to how much accurate, structured information exists about your practice across the web.

When you review your test spreadsheet, sort results into three buckets. First, "present and accurate" means the AI tool named your practice and got the details right. Second, "present but wrong" means you showed up, but with an old phone number, closed location, or incorrect service description. Third, "absent" means the AI tool didn't mention your practice for a prompt where a local competitor did.

Practices in the "present but wrong" bucket are often easiest to fix, since the underlying issue is usually a mismatched listing rather than a lack of visibility altogether. Practices in the "absent" bucket need a broader look at where their information exists online and whether competitors simply have more consistent, detailed listings feeding these tools.

Reading what the AI says about you and competitors

Reading AI answers carefully means paying attention not just to whether your practice appears, but to how it's described and what it's compared against. Answer engines often summarize a practice in a sentence or two, and that summary reveals which sources the AI tool trusted most, whether that's your website, a directory, or patient reviews.

When your practice appears, check whether the description matches how you'd describe your own services. If the AI tool describes you using outdated language, missing services, or an old address, that mismatch points to a specific source that needs correcting. When a competitor appears instead of you, look at what makes their listing more complete: do they have more reviews, clearer service descriptions on their website, or more consistent name-address-phone details across directories?

It's also worth asking follow-up questions in the same conversation, such as "does your practice name accept new patients" or "what insurance does your practice name accept." This shows you whether the AI tool has any information about you at all, even if it didn't surface your practice in the initial answer. A tool that can answer specific follow-up questions about your practice has some data on file; a tool that says it has no information signals a bigger gap to close.

Turning findings into a short list of fixes

Turning a visibility check into action means converting your spreadsheet of results into two or three concrete priorities rather than trying to fix everything at once. Practices that see the clearest improvement in AI visibility usually start with the issue that's most common across their test results, whether that's inconsistent contact information, missing service descriptions, or a thin review presence.

Group your findings by root cause. If several prompts returned outdated information, the priority is correcting your practice's details everywhere they appear online, including directories, your website, and any profile pages. If your practice was absent from comparison-style prompts, the priority is likely building out clearer, more specific descriptions of your services so AI tools have more to summarize. If competitors consistently outranked you, look specifically at what their online presence includes that yours doesn't.

Revisit your test after making changes, using the same prompts and the same spreadsheet format, so you can see whether your "present and accurate" count is increasing over time.

A diagnostic you can run this week without buying anything

Set aside thirty minutes this week. Open ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity in separate tabs. Write down five prompts a new patient would realistically use, based on your location, services, and insurance. Run each prompt in each tool and record, line by line, whether your practice appeared, whether the details were accurate, and which competitors showed up instead. At the end, count how many of the fifteen results (five prompts times three tools) placed your practice accurately in front of a prospective patient. That single number is your starting point, and repeating the same exercise in a month will tell you whether your visibility is moving in the right direction.

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