You measure whether AI search is bringing new podiatry patients by combining two habits: asking new patients directly how they found you, and periodically testing what tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity say when someone asks for a podiatrist in your area. Neither method alone gives a complete picture, but together they show whether AI-driven discovery is actually converting into booked appointments.
Why traditional analytics miss zero-click discovery
Google Analytics and your website's traffic reports were built for an era when people clicked links to find information. AI assistants often answer questions directly inside the chat or search interface, a pattern called zero-click discovery because the person never clicks through to your website at all. A patient could ask an assistant "which podiatrist treats plantar fasciitis near me," get your clinic's name and phone number, and call you without ever appearing in your website analytics. Your traffic dashboard would show nothing, even though the AI tool did the work of sending you a patient.
This is why practice owners who rely only on Google Analytics or Search Console often conclude AI search isn't affecting them, when in reality they simply lack a way to see it. The visit happened outside the systems designed to track clicks.
What to ask at intake to attribute AI-driven visits
The most reliable way to attribute a new patient to AI search is to ask them directly at intake, using specific enough language that the answer is useful. A generic "how did you hear about us" field lumps AI referrals in with word-of-mouth and general search, hiding the signal you're trying to find. Front desk staff need a short, consistent script and a place to record the answer so patterns show up over time.
Instead of a single open field, use a short list of options on your intake form or have staff ask verbally: search engine, referral from another doctor, insurance directory, social media, or "an AI assistant like ChatGPT or Gemini." Naming the specific tools matters, because many patients won't think to mention it unless prompted. Some won't know the term "AI search" but will recognize "I asked ChatGPT" or "I asked Google's AI thing" when given the option. Train front desk staff to note this consistently for every new patient, not just when it seems relevant, and review the tally monthly rather than daily so seasonal noise doesn't distort the trend.
How to track your clinic's mentions across assistants over time
Beyond patient-reported data, you can test directly what AI assistants say about podiatrists in your area by asking them the same questions a prospective patient would. This means periodically running searches on ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews using phrases like "best podiatrist for ingrown toenails in your city" or "podiatrist near me that treats sports injuries," then recording whether your practice is mentioned, how it's described, and what competitors appear alongside it.
Set a recurring schedule, monthly is reasonable, to run a consistent set of five to ten questions across each major assistant. Keep a simple log: the question asked, which assistant, whether your clinic appeared, and what was said about you. This creates a record you can compare over time, showing whether your visibility in AI answers is improving, staying flat, or being overtaken by competitors. It also reveals factual errors, like outdated hours or an old address, that could be costing you patients before they ever call.
This tracking matters because AI assistants pull information from a mix of your website, review platforms, directories, and other sources. If those sources disagree or are outdated, the assistant may give a wrong or incomplete answer, and you won't know unless you're checking.
What a realistic sign of progress looks like
Realistic progress looks like a gradual increase in intake responses citing an AI assistant, paired with more accurate and more frequent mentions of your practice when you run your own test questions. It does not look like a sudden spike in traffic or a single dramatic change; AI-driven discovery tends to build over months as your practice's information becomes more consistent and complete across the sources these tools rely on.
Expect the intake data and the assistant-testing data to move somewhat independently at first. You might see your practice mentioned more accurately in test searches before that shows up in patient-reported attribution, simply because it takes time for more people to actually use AI tools to find a podiatrist and then walk through your door. Watch the trend across several months rather than judging based on any single week. A practice that goes from rarely appearing in AI answers to consistently appearing, with correct details, alongside a handful of new patients per month mentioning an AI assistant at intake, is seeing real movement, even if the numbers are modest.
If you track both signals for a quarter and see no movement at all, that's useful information too. It suggests either your practice's information isn't reaching these assistants clearly, or your local market hasn't shifted much toward using AI tools for this kind of search yet. Either way, the data tells you where to focus attention next.
The myth about AI search that costs podiatry practices patients
The most common misconception among podiatry practice owners is that AI search is something happening "out there," disconnected from their own website and listings, and therefore not something they can influence or measure. The reality is the opposite: AI assistants form their answers from the same information ecosystem that already surrounds your practice, your website content, your online reviews, your directory listings, and how consistently your name, address, phone number, and services appear across all of them.
This means AI search isn't a separate channel you passively hope to benefit from. It's a direct reflection of how clear, consistent, and current your practice's information already is across the internet. When that information is accurate and easy for an assistant to find and reconcile, you show up more often and more correctly in the answers patients receive. When it's outdated or inconsistent, an assistant may skip your practice entirely or, worse, describe it incorrectly. Measuring your presence in AI answers isn't just tracking a trend; it's a direct check on whether the information your practice has already put into the world is doing its job.