A person searching for a new doctor rarely types a clinic's name first. They ask a question like "internal medicine doctor near me accepting new patients," and Gemini or Google AI Overviews answers by pulling details from your Google Business Profile, your website's own pages, and any health directories or review sites that mention your practice. If those sources agree on your specialty, location, and availability, your name gets surfaced. If they conflict or are thin, you get skipped in favor of a competitor whose information is cleaner.
The path from question to your clinic's name
A new patient's search rarely starts with a practice name. It starts with a need: a doctor who takes their insurance, is accepting new patients, and is close by. Gemini and AI Overviews answer that need by scanning structured, consistent information across a handful of trusted sources, then naming two or three practices that match. Your job is making sure your practice is one of the ones with matching, trustworthy data everywhere it looks.
The sequence works roughly like this: the patient asks a conversational question, the AI system identifies the intent (find a doctor, check availability, confirm insurance), then it cross-references your Business Profile, website, and third-party mentions to build a short answer. Practices with consistent name, address, phone number, and specialty listed everywhere are far easier for the AI to summarize confidently than practices with outdated or conflicting details scattered across the web.
What Google AI Overviews pull from about local doctors
Google AI Overviews built its answer about a local internal medicine practice from a narrow set of inputs: the Google Business Profile, the practice's own website content, and health directory or review listings that reinforce the same facts. It favors information that appears the same way in multiple places over a single glowing but isolated mention, because agreement across sources signals reliability.
This means a practice's Business Profile category, hours, accepted insurance list, and patient-facing description all matter as much as the website itself. If the Business Profile says "Internal Medicine" but the website emphasizes "Primary Care" without mentioning internal medicine anywhere, the AI Overview has to guess which is accurate, and it may hedge by leaving the practice out of a specific answer entirely. Matching language across every listed source removes that ambiguity and gives the AI a clean fact to repeat.
Directory listings on sites like Healthgrades, Zocdoc, or insurance-network pages count too. When those third-party profiles list the wrong phone number, an old address, or a physician who no longer practices there, the AI system either ignores your practice for that query or, worse, repeats the outdated detail to a patient who then can't reach you.
Inline definition of zero-click search
A zero-click search is a search where the person gets their answer directly on the results page, whether from an AI Overview, a knowledge panel, or a featured snippet, without ever clicking through to a website. For an internal medicine practice, this means a patient might learn your hours, address, and whether you're accepting new patients entirely from the AI's summary, then call or walk in without visiting your site at all.
Zero-click search changes what "getting found" means. Ranking well on a results page used to guarantee a website visit. Now it guarantees an impression, and sometimes an action, but only if the summarized information is accurate. A practice that ignores its Business Profile because "the website has everything" is leaving the zero-click answer to chance, since many patients never make it to the website in the first place.
How Gemini treats your Business Profile and website
Gemini, when asked about local internal medicine options, treats your Google Business Profile as the anchor record and your website as the supporting detail. It uses the Business Profile for the basics, name, category, hours, phone, and rating, then checks your website for depth: services offered, physician credentials, insurance accepted, and whether the practice explicitly states it welcomes new patients.
If your website is vague about what "internal medicine" covers, or if it doesn't state whether you're taking new patients in plain text, Gemini has less material to work with and may default to a shorter, less specific answer or skip your practice in favor of one that states these facts clearly. Structured, explicit language on your own site strengthens what Gemini can say about you elsewhere.
Gemini also weighs recency. A Business Profile with reviews from years ago and no recent activity reads as less current than one with steady, recent reviews and updated hours. Practices that keep their profile active, respond to reviews, and update seasonal hours or holiday closures give Gemini fresher signals to draw from when answering a real-time question like "is this doctor open today."
Making your practice easy to summarize accurately
An internal medicine practice becomes easy for AI systems to summarize accurately when its name, address, phone number, specialty, and new-patient status match exactly across its Business Profile, website, and every directory listing. Precise, plain-language descriptions of services and insurance acceptance reduce the guesswork these systems have to do, which increases the odds of being named instead of skipped.
Start with the basics that appear in the most places: confirm your Business Profile category is correctly set to internal medicine, not a broader or unrelated category. Check that your website states, in plain sentences, which insurance plans you accept and whether you're currently accepting new patients, since AI systems pull direct language rather than inferring it from a form or a phone-only answer.
Audit third-party directories for outdated physician names, old addresses, or wrong phone numbers. A single outdated directory entry can contradict an otherwise clean Business Profile and website, and that contradiction is often enough for an AI system to leave your practice out of a confident answer. Consistency across every source, not perfection on any one platform, is what makes a practice easy to name.
Finally, keep language specific rather than generic. "We provide comprehensive internal medicine care for adults, including chronic disease management and preventive checkups" gives an AI system concrete phrases to repeat. A vague tagline like "quality healthcare for the whole family" gives it nothing distinct to quote, and generic descriptions are exactly what gets a practice passed over in a specific search.
The practices that get named by Gemini and Google AI Overviews are not necessarily the largest or the longest-established. They are the ones whose basic facts agree everywhere a patient or an AI system might look, and whose own words leave little room for ambiguity about who they treat and how to reach them.