May 29, 2024

Chart The Waters

Explore insights on SEO, AI, and digital marketing strategies designed to help your business grow, stay visible, and adapt in a constantly evolving online landscape.
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Written by Brandon Grill, updated and revised by Sara Jokela 2/19/25.

Creating or improving your therapist website is hard.

  • There are technical, design, and SEO aspects to take into account.
  • You have to format everything correctly and make it look good.
  • And you’ll likely only do it for your website, so you don’t have the benefit of experience.

Without knowing how to improve your website, you’re working in the dark.

But it’s not all bad, because there are some truly amazing therapist websites out there that you can learn from. That’s why I’ve collected thirteen of the best therapist websites on the web.

Use these great therapist website examples as inspiration and to gain insights about what a great therapist website really looks and feels like.

Then take the lessons of each and apply them to your practice website for the win.

What Makes a Great Therapist Website?

A great therapist website is more than just a digital business card; it’s a powerful tool that can help you connect with potential clients and grow your practice. At its core, a great therapist website effectively communicates your services, approach, and personality, while providing a welcoming and easy-to-navigate experience for visitors. This combination helps establish trust and credibility, making it more likely for potential clients to take the next step and schedule an appointment.

When designing your therapist website, think about what your clients need to know and how you can present that information in a clear and engaging way. Your website should reflect your professionalism and the unique qualities that set you apart as a therapist. By doing so, you create a space where potential clients feel understood and supported even before they walk through your door.

Key Features of Effective Therapist Websites

  1. Clear and Concise Content: Your website should clearly communicate your services, approach, and specialties. Avoid jargon and keep your language simple and direct.
  2. Easy Navigation: A well-organized website with clear navigation helps visitors find the information they need quickly and easily. This improves their overall experience and reduces frustration.
  3. Professional Design: A clean and modern design can help establish trust and credibility. Your website should look polished and professional, reflecting the quality of your services.
  4. Responsive Design: Ensure your website is optimized for mobile devices and tablets. This allows visitors to access your site from any device, providing a seamless experience.
  5. Secure Online Scheduling: A secure online scheduling system makes it easy for visitors to book appointments. This convenience can be a deciding factor for potential clients.
  6. Testimonials: Including testimonials from previous clients can help build trust and credibility. Positive feedback from others reassures potential clients about the quality of your services.
  7. Clear Call-to-Actions: Use clear call-to-actions, such as “Schedule an Appointment” or “Contact Us,” to guide visitors towards taking the next step. Make it easy for them to reach out and connect with you.

Benefits of Having a Professional Therapist Website

  1. Increased Visibility: A professional website can help increase your visibility online, making it easier for potential clients to find you.
  2. Established Credibility: A well-designed website helps establish your credibility and trustworthiness, which is crucial for attracting new clients.
  3. Improved Communication: Your website provides a clear and concise way to communicate your services and approach, helping potential clients understand what you offer.
  4. Increased Accessibility: A website makes it convenient for clients to schedule appointments and access information about your services at any time.
  5. Competitive Advantage: A professional website can help differentiate you from competitors, showcasing your unique strengths and approach.

12 Must-See Therapist Websites You Can Learn From

In no particular order, here are the 12 must-see websites, along with commentary on what you can learn from them about effectively showcasing counseling services.

Private Practice Therapist Website: Her Space Therapy LA

What I love about this website: Niche focus

This private practice therapist website calls out its target audience of women and mothers.

As mental health professionals, you may want to help everyone. But any longtime marketer knows that targeted messaging is best. Especially for a successful therapist website.

Additionally, all of the services are related to this audience, i.e. therapy for moms, therapy for infertility, therapy for reproductive trauma, and more.

Even the one seeming exception, “therapy for dads,” includes notes about supporting mother and baby. 

There’s no escaping it – this is clearly THE website for women and mothers, and nobody else.

Why it works: By speaking so clearly to one type of person, they connect on a deep level. Imagine being a mother and needing help yourself, then coming across this beautiful and well-targeted website.

You’d be jumping out of your seat to get onto her schedule!

Center for Grief and Trauma Therapy

What I love about this website: Empathy

This practice used a common feeling amongst those who are grieving, whether they can put the words to it or not: “I feel like I’m grieving wrong…”

Who among us hasn’t felt this way at some point? After all, most people were not taught how to grieve effectively. And it’s a message website visitors will welcome wholeheartedly.

Why it works: Calling out this feeling in the website copy shows that this practice gets them. By speaking to the reader’s experience, they start building trust right away, leading to 80 qualified leads per month.

Ellie Mental Health

What I love about this website: Branding

This website is such a vibe. So much so that it’s even part of the headline, “Find a Therapist You Can Vibe With.”

Each image looks like a real human being (no awkward photos or angles), and the backgrounds are made to be one color each.

The copy is wonderful and makes therapy seem like the obvious choice. I mean who doesn’t want to sleep better, laugh more, and stay with their partner!

Why it works: On an emotional and visual level, this website is off the charts. It’s no wonder they saw a 413% increase in traffic and currently get around $68,000 worth of free advertisement in organic search results. Choose your branding wisely. Building your own therapist website is crucial for attracting clients and establishing a strong online presence.

Therapy Near Me LV

What I love about this website: Keeping Service Front and Center

This private practice therapist website does a great job of linking to the different therapy services that they offer.

They put links to each service right underneath the hero shot, thereby helping potential clients find what they’re looking for fast.

Including a relevant picture, benefit-driven bullet points, and a button to “learn more” makes this even more enticing, and the internal linking helps with SEO.

Why it works: Often, a private practice homepage will act as sort of a catch-all or directory. If you have many services and many different types of clients, even more so. Linking to each service on the home page (and in the navigation menu) improves how easily potential clients find what they’re looking for.

Place your services front and center so people can quickly locate them (and get started on their therapy journey with you).

Tides Mental Health in Chicago

What I love about this website: Strategic CTAs

There’s a treasure trove of great marketing implementation in this single website.

I mean, you don’t get a 79% decrease in cost-per-lead by accident.

And while there are a million amazing things that stick out to me about this website, I want to call attention to the calls to action, and how you can use them on your own website.

There are at least 4 on the home page, placed right where readers are likely to click – at the top, bottom, and after the “services” and “how it works” sections. Clear calls to action are crucial for a marriage and family therapist to guide potential clients effectively.

Why it works: This website makes it easier than Bologna to get started with multiple CTAs littered throughout the site in strategic locations… (and the professional looks, visual branding, client-focused copy, FAQs, relatable images, and overall caring tone don’t hurt!)

Site for Mental Health Professionals: Center for Improving Relationships

What I love about this website: Top Banner

Adding a banner is a great way to increase your conversions.

In giving new site visitors your contact information up front, you improve the chances that they’ll reach out.

They also include their contact info at the bottom of the page, along with their Google Maps widgets for their two locations. It’s a nice touch and one that’ll make a good therapist website great.

Why it works: a banner places all of the important contact info in a place where new visitors will see it. By giving them this information very clearly, they know that you want them to reach out and how to do so.

If you’re looking to improve your conversions of potential clients, add a top banner. This is especially important for those offering family therapy, as it ensures families can easily find the support they need.

The Gritty Therapist

What I love about this website: the headline complex

The headline for this website isn’t traditional. I think of it more like a vibe than a headline.

“Connection, Empowerment, and Structure”

What person doesn’t want these?

It’s followed up by, “therapy for individuals, couples, and families,” which elaborates on the types of clients she works with.

The Gritty Therapist then adds even more detail, saying “traveling therapist providing in-home and online therapy throughout Texas.”

Lastly, there’s a very clear call-to-action button offering a free 20-minute consultation. As a private practice therapist, this website speaks to potential clients very well. Alexandria Art Therapy also offers specialized art therapy and counseling services, highlighting the unique healing potential that art offers in addressing emotional and psychological challenges.

Why it works: In being so clear about the types of clients served and what they can get out of therapy, readers are likely to think, “This seems like what I’m looking for.” Placing this front and center in the headline complex? Smart move.

Jim Dolan Therapy

What I love about this website: Client-Focus

Out of all the therapist websites we’re looking at, this one breaks the most rules.

And I love it.

I usually counsel therapists to put their “about” section lower on the home page, preferring to talk about the client’s problems and the therapist’s service before talking about themselves.

But Jim did a great job of connecting with the reader by taking this lens: “How does ‘who I am as a therapist’ help the client?”

Also, he accomplished this without overdoing it. He only used 125 words! SR Psychological Services also emphasizes the importance of addressing client needs effectively.

Why it works: Speaking to the reader about their problems and keeping the focus on them is a cheatcode for creating a strong connection. Furthermore, the headshot of this therapist complements the copy extremely well.

Don’t you feel like you know Jim after reading this section?

Sara Murdoch Therapy

What I love about this website: Thoughtful Simplicity

You’ll quickly notice that this therapist website doesn’t use a navigation menu.

As a solo practice, this website doesn’t need complex navigation. And in fact, everything you need is right on this one page.

It has a headline, scheduling link, phone call button, some website copy, and a very interesting and vulnerable “about” section. It also has images, pop-out quotes, frequent calls-to-action, and a contact form.

Why it works: In keeping things simple, website visitors have a streamlined experience with the website. They scroll down until something catches their eye, read a bit more, and click the contact button. Miss Murdoch makes it work as a private practice therapist.

Real Change Counseling

What I love about this website: “Good Enough” Marketing

I love this example because it’s not what you would expect a high-performing site to look like.

The site navigation is a few inches thick, the website copy is almost too streamlined, and there’s only one call-to-action in the main text.

But everything is accomplished, and that’s beautiful.

I spoke with the creator of this website, Phil Rozek, and he said this website fills up the therapist’s caseload with very little need for ongoing work.

Why it works: This website goes heavy on internal linking. There are links to every major page in (1) the navigation, (2) the website copy, and (3) in the footer. Every page is linked to multiple times throughout the homepage, and this helps the website rank more highly in Google Maps Packs for local searches.

Lastly, going so heavy on internal linking helps site visitors find what they’re looking for fast. This keeps them on your website for longer, an amazing signal for Google.

Audrey Schoen

What I love about this website: The Welcome Video

This private practice therapist did an amazing job on her video. She was warm, empathetic, friendly, professional, and engaging.

It’s no secret to me why she’s able to earn a high session fee, going as high as $525 per session (from her website banner).

Why it works: Adding a video to your website accomplishes at least two things.

For one, it helps improve your rankings in Google. How? By increasing the amount of time people spend on your website – a powerful signal that tells Google, “people love this therapist website, so recommend it to more people!”

For two, a video helps site visitors feel connected with you and like they know you. This understandably leads to comfort and more messages from visitors.

Trauma Recovery Center of Arizona

What I love about this website: Addressing frequently asked questions (FAQs)

At the bottom of this website, you’ll find several FAQs and their answers. 

This is a great move for therapy practices which, by nature, are dealing with sensitive information.

Why it works: By addressing each FAQ up front, therapy practices can provide all of the information a new client needs to make an informed decision. FAQs clear up any doubts or lingering concerns and are an effective selling tool.

Furthermore, FAQs are often keywords themselves, so including a few increases your ability to rank for various search terms. Add 5-8 FAQs on each of your main pages and watch your rankings improve.

Building a Successful Therapist Website

Building a successful therapist website requires careful planning and attention to detail. By following a structured approach, you can create a website that effectively attracts and engages potential clients.

Getting Started with Your Therapy Website

  1. Define Your Target Audience: Identify your ideal client and tailor your website to meet their needs. Understanding who you want to reach will guide your content and design choices.
  2. Choose a Website Platform: Select a user-friendly website platform like WordPress or Squarespace. These platforms offer customizable templates and features that make it easy to create a professional-looking site.
  3. Select a Domain Name: Choose a domain name that is easy to remember and relevant to your practice. Your domain name should reflect your brand and be easy for clients to find.
  4. Design Your Website: Create a clean and modern design that reflects your practice and personality. Use professional images, consistent branding, and a layout that is easy to navigate.
  5. Create Content: Write clear and concise content that communicates your services and approach. Focus on how you can help your clients and what makes your practice unique.
  6. Add Features: Incorporate features such as online scheduling, testimonials, and clear call-to-actions. These elements enhance the user experience and make it easier for clients to connect with you.
  7. Launch and Promote: Once your website is ready, launch it and promote it through social media and other marketing channels. Regularly update your content and engage with your audience to keep your website fresh and relevant.

By following these steps and incorporating the key features of effective therapist websites, you can create a successful therapist website that attracts new clients and helps grow your practice. Remember, your website is an extension of your practice, so invest the time and effort to make it a valuable resource for your clients.

Use These Therapist Website Examples as Inspiration

Now that you’ve seen thirteen of the best therapy websites, you have a few options.

For one, use at least one of the above tips on your website each month.

Strengthening your website is a long process and there’s always room for improvement.

Choose one of the above great therapist website examples and implement the lesson I’ve outlined for you. Commit to using each of the tips until you’re satisfied with your website (and attracting new clients).

Also, be sure to bookmark this blog post and come back to it once a month as you continue improving your therapist website.

Second, stay committed to building your marketing channels. They take time and energy but are worth the effort in the end.

Ready to learn more about how we’re creating therapy websites that draw in clients? Contact us today for a free discovery call.

About the author: This post is guest-authored by Brandon Grill, a mental health marketer based in Las Vegas, NV. Brandon helps group therapy practices create amazing websites and rank #1 in Google through thoughtful SEO efforts. In his free time, Brandon loves to spend time with his family (including his two young nephews AJ and Elias), reading, running, meditating, and being outside.

Need help crafting a compelling mental health narrative that reaches the right audience? Contact me today and let’s chat!

Behavioral health marketing isn’t like other industries. There are far more ethical and legal considerations than in industries like retail and home services. But the stakes are much higher.

We’re talking about changing (and even saving) lives here.

With stakes like this, it’s important to understand the unique challenges you’ll face. How can you overcome the unique marketing challenges and market your behavioral health clinic effectively? And how will this help you grow your clinic, achieve greater community impact, and ensure the health of your community?

Bulleted list of the 13 Top Behavioral Health Marketing Challenges

Challenge #1: Identifying a Clear Target Audience

The biggest marketing challenge that behavioral health providers face is knowing who to market to. Should you get your services in front of everyone? Is anyone using substances to alter their mood, or a specific age group? People in your geographic region or nationwide?

This is a big challenge, and one I call a “lead domino.” By figuring out your target audience in clear detail, everything else will become much easier. That’s because your marketing is fully based on WHO you’re trying to reach. Whether you use Ads, SEO, Social Media, or another marketing channel depends on where you can most easily find your target audience.

Everything stems from WHO exactly you want to come to your clinic, so gaining clarity here is a fundamental marketing task.

Solution #1: Develop an Ideal Client Persona

We recommend you start by identifying and researching the type of client you love working with. By marketing to the people you love working with, you’ll attract more of them. That means a fulfilling practice for your entire team.

The main challenge here is trying to go too wide. The common refrain in marketing is “By speaking to everyone, you speak to no one.” So it’s important to pick 1-3 specific ideal client personas. And that number depends on how many services you offer. For example, your ideal teen client will be different from your ideal family client.

Are you worried that marketing to someone specific will discourage others from reaching out? That’s a common trap that businesses fall into, i.e. trying to please everyone. Don’t worry! By speaking to a specific audience, your conversions will go up, and even if someone doesn’t resonate 100% with your marketing, they’ll appreciate that you know who you work with best.

Here’s how to identify your ideal type of client and supercharge your marketing.

Identify your top specialties. Perhaps you offer addiction treatment services, and your clinicians have advanced training for AUD specifically. This could lead you to identify people with AUD as your ideal clients.

Go deeper. Considering people with AUD you’ve helped in the past, what are some common characteristics? Identify at least 5 characteristics. For example, perhaps your favorite clients are all upper-class women who struggle with AUD. They have an average of 3 children and work in the legal industry. They have childhood trauma and likely have co-occurring depression.

Now consider their age, gender, roles, how they see themselves, common objections to getting help, things they may have tried before, hobbies, and where they hang out online.

Write this all down into one document and refer to it often. Look at it whenever you’re creating new marketing materials and ensure you’re targeting the correct types of clients for your practice. Knowing in clear detail who you’re trying to reach with your marketing is half the battle.

Challenge #2: Choosing Great Marketing Channels to Promote Your Behavioral Health Care Services

Another challenge faced by behavioral health clinics is knowing how much to spend on marketing, and what channels to pursue. This is especially true for newer clinics that have less longevity and exposure in their communities.

But where do you start? There are dozens of marketing channels to choose from: print, newspaper ads, digital advertising, SEO, email marketing, social media, in-person networking, radio interviews, podcasting, PR, Facebook groups, direct mail, and more. Feeling overwhelmed with your marketing strategy yet?

Solution #2: Identify 1-2 Marketing Channels to Invest In

Not to worry. If you’ve identified your target audience well, you’ll have a few ideas for how to find them and get your services in front of them. Maybe you want to work with Moms struggling with postpartum depression and identify a few Facebook groups where you can reach them. (Or have ideas for starting a group). And you know that SEO and Google Ads can be highly valuable. The only challenge now is picking 1-2 channels to invest in.

This is where the NMB framework can help you. NMB is a framework for guiding your marketing efforts, and stands for “new, more, better.” You don’t want to take on too much too soon, so we recommend starting with 1 new channel. Once you get a feel for that channel, do it more. Lock the consistency and frequency in, then do it better–invest in mentorship and feedback, better tools, and a stronger strategy.

Of course, you’re probably marketing already. In that case, you’ll want to choose either “more” or “better” for one of your current channels. Remember that great marketing is about consistency as much as anything, so follow this framework.

If you’re brand new to marketing, we recommend optimizing your website and getting started with Google Ads. These will bring the most short-term gains, and having a great website sets your clinic up for long-term growth.

Challenge #3: Getting New Clients Sooner Rather Than Later

If you have caseloads to fill, you don’t want to wait months or years for your marketing to work. One example is SEO which can take 6-9+ months to start showing real results. You need marketing strategies that work in the short term and that are cost-effective.

If you don’t get clients sooner rather than later, you’ll have a cascade of negative effects on your clinic. You may have trouble retaining clinicians due to caseloads that are only partially filled. The less revenue that comes into your business, the less money you have to invest in great marketing. Lastly, you may have trouble paying the salaries of your key employees.

Solution #3: Short-term Marketing Methods like Paid Ads and Referrals

Let’s talk about referral strategies first. I helped one client get 3 new great-fit clients within 2 weeks of implementing a referral program. And it was super simple. All we did was brainstorm a big list of anyone and everyone who could potentially refer someone to her.

We included her hair stylist, the barista at her favorite cafe, people from the city she lived in 2 years prior, friends, family, and therapist colleagues. Then, my client got to promoting herself. In fact, she told me that she felt awkward at first, but now talks to people at her gym and staff wherever she goes with ease.

Follow the same steps to build a referral strategy.

Brainstorm anyone and everyone who might know someone in your target audience.

Start writing them, calling them, and meeting with them in person to discuss potential referrals.

Just remember to give value in return. Refer clients back if it makes sense, send thank you notes, flowers, etc. But never pay for referrals, as that’s not legal.

If you’re a big behavioral health clinic, work this strategy with each of your clinicians until they’re at or near capacity. If one clinician is already full, use their referrals to help other clinicians at your clinic.

Now Let’s Consider Paid Advertising

Paying for ads is incredibly effective. In fact, Beacon has the benchmark data to prove that you can spend just $30 in advertising to get a new client. Considering that a new client can be worth thousands to your business, paid advertising is a no-brainer.

Ads are highly cost-effective. The only challenge is partnering with a behavioral health marketing agency that knows the behavioral health field and legal landscape. Oh, and has a track record of getting results.

If you’d like help getting droves of new clients in 90 days or less, contact Beacon Media + Marketing. We’ll give you a free growth plan when you meet with us. Contact today.

Challenge #4: Finding Local Clients

It’s great to be found nationally by new clients. But I wouldn’t bet on this as a way to consistently fill your caseloads. The vast majority of clients for behavioral health services won’t be able to afford large travel costs. Instead, you’ll need an effective way to attract and convert local clients for your clinic.

If you neglect local marketing in favor of national marketing, you will likely have fewer clients overall, have empty slots in your schedule, and not be as fulfilled in your clinic as you can be. Plus, your clinicians may feel that they’re not truly supported. They’re holding up their end of the bargain, why are their caseloads not full?

Solution #4: Local SEO for Behavioral and Mental Health Services

Local SEO is a godsend for behavioral health professionals in 2024. By using strategic efforts to rank highly in the Google Maps 3-pack, you’ll attract a ton of local clients to your clinic. This can help keep your caseloads full and business humming along. Here are some tips to overcome the challenge of not getting enough local clients.

  • Get backlinks from local charities, nonprofits, hospitals, and government offices. Reach out to sponsor their work, become a partner, and add value to their audiences.
  • Add your name, address, and phone number (NAP) to each page of your website. This is done easiest by including it in your footer.
  • Add your Google Maps widget to your location pages and website footer.
  • Have each of your clinicians set up separate GMB profiles. These should all link back to your practice website. These listings are more ways for local clients to find out about your practice.
  • Get citations from business directories like Apple Maps, Angie’s List, Yelp, and Yellow Pages.
  • Don’t forget to point your Psychology Today profile to your website.
  • Get reviews for your GMB profile (see solution #13 below).

Each of these steps will strengthen your ability to appear in local search results and attract new clients. Be diligent and committed to local SEO and it will reward you very well. Plus, like other marketing channels, it gets easier over time. The hardest part is the first few months.

Challenge #5: Relying Too Much on Short-Term Marketing

Quote from Jennifer Christensen "The Beacon Way focuses on all areas of the sales funnel and concentrates our strategy around creating engaging, relevant, and interesting content which increases thought leadership in any industry."

Short-term marketing efforts have their place in any business. But what if you want truly outstanding results, you need long-term marketing efforts as well. It’s not enough to rely on ads or referral marketing as you aim to grow and expand your clinic. Plus, google ads seem to only go up in price, not down.

Without an eye on long-term growth in your marketing specifically and business overall, you can fall prey to trends, changing things too often, not tracking variables appropriately, and more. The end result is clunky marketing efforts that aren’t as effective as they could be. And in today’s competitive behavioral health landscape, you can’t afford to be second best.

Solution #5: Invest in Your Marketing Channels Long-Term for Best Results

Your biggest long-term marketing channel should be SEO. And not just putting anything up on your website, but using content (blogs, service pages, lead magnets) to drive traffic and conversions. Because SEO takes 3-6 months for results to start trickling in, and roughly 9-12 months to get real results, you need to invest now.

In fact, one of the biggest regrets CEOs have is not starting SEO sooner. It’s incredibly powerful and can be the only channel you need in certain cases (though not always recommended). Here’s how to set up SEO as your best long-term marketing channel.

  • Identify your top 20 high-intent keywords. A lot of these will have “near me” or “therapist” in them, such as “eating disorder therapist Atlanta” or “grief therapy near me.” Make service or specialty pages for each of these, add internal links, and nudge blog readers onto them. These are your conversion pages.
  • Start producing weekly blog content that targets relevant keywords. Just make sure the keywords you’re targeting aren’t too difficult. A good rule of thumb is to only target keywords that are as difficult as your site is strong. For example, if your domain authority is 27, only target keywords that have a difficulty rating of 27 or lower.
  • Lastly, use PR and services like Qwoted and Connectively to get free, high-value backlinks.

Then continue with weekly blog content and gaining backlinks. Over time, your website will become a powerhouse for your marketing. Have the goal of reaching the top 1-3 positions for all of your high-intent keywords.

Challenge #6: HIPAA Compliance and Costs

HIPAA compliance is fast becoming its own industry, with $8.3B of value in economic terms. But how do HIPAA compliance and the associated costs affect your marketing?

For one, you want to be incredibly cautious about using any information from your client’s medical records. Not only is it illegal and unethical, but it can lead to major fines.

On the other hand, you don’t want to let HIPAA compliance scare you into being too cautious. As long as your marketing navigates these laws, you should market your clinic confidently.

Solution #6: Maintain Compliance While Pursuing Marketing Results

The solution here is to use thoughtful, HIPAA-compliant marketing. Believe it or not, thousands of clinics across the country run ads, write blogs, and make social media posts that don’t violate any laws. Here are some fundamental recommendations you can follow.

  • Invest in Secure Marketing Tools: Use HIPAA-compliant marketing platforms to ensure all communications are secure and within legal boundaries.
  • Train Your Team: Regularly train your marketing and administrative staff on HIPAA regulations to avoid inadvertent violations.
  • Transparent Communication: Be clear about how you handle patient data and obtain explicit consent for marketing communications.
  • Legal Consultation: Work with legal experts to ensure your marketing strategies comply with HIPAA, minimizing the risk of costly penalties.

Also, avoid case studies and success stories, and only use testimonials anonymously or with written permission. Lastly, consult your lawyer before using any reviews or testimonials in your marketing.

Challenge #7: Reaching Clients When They’re Ready for Help

One challenge for behavioral health clinics is that some potential clients just aren’t ready for help. You can market all you want, but you can’t make someone reach out for help with mental health challenges or substance use disorders.

The truth is that readiness is a spectrum. Some people with mental health conditions have thought about getting help, and you may be able to get them into your clinic through effective marketing. But others won’t be ready until they hit “rock bottom,” as they say.

Solution #7: Referral Partnerships

The solution here is to meet potential clients where they’re at. That means partnering with other behavioral health clinics that have complimentary services. If you do outpatient, partner with an inpatient clinic.

Also, reach out to every local hospital. Hospital emergency rooms are on the front lines of behavioral health challenges. If you can get a referral program going with them, they’ll be able to refer some clients to you, trusting that you’re better staffed, equipped, and specialized to treat them.

Other places you should reach out to:

  • Family doctors and general practitioners
  • Specialist physicians
  • College health centers
  • Social services agencies
  • Local nonprofits
  • Support groups
  • Unions and trade organizations
  • Churches, Synagogues, Mosques, and Temples
  • Faith-based charities
  • Law enforcement
  • Probation offices and judges
  • Child and family services

And more.

Just don’t forget to refer clients back to your partners where appropriate. And feel free to reach out to your fellow mental health professionals to build partnerships that way.

 

Challenge #8: Connecting with a Diverse Clientele

Another big marketing challenge you can face as a BH clinic is connecting with a diverse clientele. Serving your community means serving every demographic that needs help. You want to make sure that you’re serving all races and ethnicities, as well as gender identities and sexual expressions found in your community.

If you find that you’re only attracting and converting one or a small few types of clients, your branding and messaging are likely the culprits. Potential clients can look at your website and other marketing and know if they’ll be welcome. That’s why it’s important to have an inclusion statement and images that show diversity on your website. Otherwise, you’ll keep attracting the same types of clients. And perhaps not serving all of your community.

Solution #8: Branding and Inclusive Messaging

Connecting with a diverse clientele starts with your website. Here are some ideas for achieving a more inclusive-feeling website.

  • Use images that show diversity and inclusion.
  • Add inclusive acronyms like 2SLGBTQIA+, BIPOC, and AANHPI, if they apply to your work and intended audience
  • Sign up for the Inclusive Therapists directory and add their logo to your website, perhaps in the footer section
  • Incorporate a “Values” or “Mission” page if inclusivity is big for your clinic
  • For your team member pages, have your clinicians talk about their own struggles and learnings around inclusivity, identity, and more.

The branding elements you choose, from color palettes to photos to your website copy and language, will communicate a lot. Potential clients can take one look at your website and know if they want to work with your behavioral health professionals.

Once your website branding and messaging showcase your inclusiveness, every other marketing endeavor will be easier. Be sure to update your psychology today and other listings with this information. For your ads, consider using images of diverse people (not all one race, gender, or sexual expression, for example). Also consider creating standalone pages for certain specialties you may have, such as “LGBTQ Therapy” or “Therapy for Dads.”

Challenge #9: Destigmatizing Behavioral Health to Convert Clients

One challenge that still pops up in 2024 is stigma. Behavioral health clinics have to deal with the stigma around mental illness, and substance use especially. This may be an easy marketing challenge to overlook, seeing as mental health awareness has grown significantly in recent years.

Without addressing stigma, anyone who sees your marketing or website messaging can feel alone, misunderstood, and lacking support. They may feel hopeless, lost, and apathetic. What can you do to ensure your clinic stands out as a ray of hope and connection?

Solution #9: Destigmatizing Messaging and Blog Content

It can be a big step for someone to look at your website. To help potential clients feel even more comfortable, follow these tips:

  • Address common objections like “Will I cry in therapy?” or “I don’t know what I’m feeling” in your website copy. You can also address this in video content.
  • Write blogs that dispel myths about who goes to therapy and combat stigma, such as “men don’t go to therapy.”
  • Answer common forms of resistance in your FAQ, such as “What if therapy doesn’t work for me?”
  • Add an insurance page to your website if you accept multiple insurance plans.

Your clinic can avoid this common marketing challenge by tackling stigma head-on. Show people that you’re there for them, no matter what race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual expression, religious belief, or behavioral health challenge they experience.

Challenge #10: Knowing What Marketing is Working

A big marketing challenge for behavioral health (and mental health care) clinics: knowing what marketing is working. Whether you’re using paid ads, SEO, social media, sponsorships, podcasts, or another channel, auditing the efficacy of each marketing channel is paramount.

Imagine you never audited your marketing. You’d undoubtedly be overspending on some channels, missing out on others, and not knowing the joy and results of effective marketing. Your clinic would be losing money and may still not be full. And people in your communities wouldn’t be getting connected to the professionals who could help them the most.

Solution #10: Running a Monthly Marketing Report

The solution to this common marketing challenge is to do monthly auditing. Why monthly? Because that offers the best insight, isn’t overly frequent, and is easier to stick to than quarterly or less often.

In your monthly marketing report, you can audit the important metrics of each of your marketing channels: SEO, YouTube, social media marketing, paid advertising, and more.

What benefits do you get from these audits?

  • Adjust and improve your strategies
  • Learn what important next steps to take
  • The ability to double down on what’s working
  • Pause or cancel strategies that just aren’t working
  • Lower your marketing costs by increasing your effectiveness
  • Quickly identify if something is not working as it should, and how to fix it

For more information on running a monthly marketing report, check out our comprehensive guide. And if you don’t want to do it in-house, let Beacon Media + Marketing take it off your plate, so you can focus on serving your community.

Challenge #11: Making Content That Doesn’t Get Penalized by Google

It’s one thing to shoot from the hip with your content. It’s another to make high-quality content that adheres to Google’s EEAT guidelines. The former may be penalized while the latter sets your clinic up for SEO success. While not flashy at all, following EEAT standards helps you win in the short and long term.

Creating content that doesn’t get penalized by Google is part art and part science. Google recently added another “E” to EEAT, an acronym that stands for “Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness.” The newest Google algorithm wants content from people with first-hand experience, not just people with hearsay or second-hand accounts.

Without adhering to Google’s standards, your content and website will be pushed to the back of the line. Since virtually no one looks past the first ten results, your website will be effectively nonexistent.

Solution #11: Following EEAT guidelines

The solution for this marketing challenge is to follow Google’s guidelines. Here are some tips to implement in your marketing to ensure quality, user enjoyment, and EEAT standards:

  • Add something new to each topic you write about. So many blogs nowadays are spin-offs of what’s already out there. By adding personal experience and insights to your content, you’ll stand out in Google and with readers.
  • Show a little vulnerability or share a mistake you’ve made. Hearing about others’ hardwon lessons makes us trust them more, so show readers why they should trust you in your own marketing.
  • Garner reviews and showcase your average ratings on your website (see solution #13 below). This is a strong signal that new clients can trust you.
  • For authority, put each of your clinician’s education and notable work history on display. For more intense mental health disorders like psychosis or schizophrenia, your authority will likely outweigh the other factors in EEAT. It’s important to understand what potential clients are looking for.
  • Add your specialized training, niche-specific podcasts, and media appearances to your website. This will show that you’re a valued expert. Remember that expertise is a big factor that Google’s algorithm looks for.

Filter your online marketing through the EEAT lens. It will help you produce higher-quality content that sticks. As Google itself has said, create content that makes users happy and the rankings will follow.

Challenge #12: Staying Competitive with AI

Yet another big marketing challenge for Behavioral healthcare clinics in 2024 is staying competitive with AI. Since the release of ChatGPT to the public in late 2022, AI has found its way into every nook and cranny of marketing. And marketing for behavioral health clinics is no different.

If your clinic doesn’t use AI ethically and to its advantage, you risk falling behind more tech-savvy competitors. The result is worse marketing results, despite equal time spent. AI is too good not to use in your marketing workflows (or those of your behavioral health marketing agency).

Solution #12: Use AI to Enhance and Speed Up Your Marketing Efforts

To get and stay competitive with AI, use it for these functions:

  • Chatbots
  • Analyzing internal data
  • Acquiring new clients via SEO
  • Automating emails and reminders
  • Brainstorming lead magnets and content ideas

Internally, Beacon Media + Marketing uses a variety of AI tools. They’ve helped us streamline our processes and get better results for our clients. Start by using 1 new tool each month and trying to understand and implement it fully. If you ever need help with your marketing and benefitting from AI usage, allow Beacon to manage your marketing campaigns. You’ll get a free growth plan with our consultation.

Challenge #13: Getting Reviews and Testimonials

Getting reviews in an ethical, HIPAA-compliant way is a big marketing challenge. Like any business, behavioral health clinics would benefit from using testimonials and reviews in their marketing (such as on their website or brochures). But there are some legal hurdles to clear before you can benefit from these marketing tools.

For one, you cannot directly ask for a review or testimonial. That would violate ethical codes from the APA and the NASW. For another, you can’t use a testimonial from a current client. Without social proof from current or former clients, how can you get new clients to come to your clinic? After all, your conversions will suffer without social proof.

Solution #13: How to Ethically Source Reviews and Testimonials

As a behavioral health professional, you are not legally allowed to ask directly for reviews and testimonials. However, you can make it easy for clients to leave positive feedback in a few ways.

  • Create a testimonials page on your website where people can leave good feedback
  • On that same testimonials page, link to your GMB profile, Yelp, HealthGrades, and others
  • Have a sign in your lobby with a QR code to leave a GMB review

The best thing about these steps is that you only have to set everything up once. Then you or one of your office staff can respond to all reviews, both positive and negative, to increase engagement. This will help your clinic show up in local search results and fill your caseloads sooner rather than later.

Overcoming Obstacles to Great Behavioral Health Marketing

If you’ve made it this far, you’re ready to take on behavioral health marketing in earnest. You now know the biggest challenges of marketing in your industry. And you should have a lot more direction and insight into what actions to take next. For further reading, check out our blog on where to invest your marketing budget. If you’re already investing in Google Ads, see how your clinic compares to 72 others with our easy-to-understand benchmark data.

Do you want cost-effective marketing without the headache? Get your free growth plan from Beacon Media + Marketing and let our experts guide your behavioral health marketing to success.

Marketing audits are crucial for the success of your mental or behavioral health clinic in 2024. 

Billions and billions of investment dollars have been poured into the mental health space since the pandemic. And as marketing for these niches becomes more sophisticated and competitive, you need to know:

  • what marketing is working
  • what marketing needs work
  • what marketing to stop altogether

According to Beacon’s 2024 State of Mental Health Marketing Report, 45% of clinics say that their greatest challenge is knowing what marketing works best for them.

To help you get clarity on your clinics’ marketing audit process, we’ve created this complete guide to doing a successful marketing audit.

Want to skip the hassle? Allow Beacon Media + Marketing to conduct your marketing audit today and get your free growth plan.

Only One in Four Clinics Audit Their Marketing Strategies Regularly

Circle graph showing statistics

In unique data from 173 mental and behavioral health clinics, collected by Beacon in late 2023, it was found that only 27.78% of clinics do monthly marketing audits.

Additionally, 51% are conducting no audits at any point throughout the year.

With the lack of an effective marketing audit, it’s no secret why clinics feel so uncertain about their marketing plan.

Monthly Auditing Is Essential, Here’s Why

Both mental health and marketing are changing rapidly. 

In mental health, there are new advancements like widespread telehealth, the introduction of Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy and other upcoming psychedelic-assisted therapies, and an insurance landscape that’s due for an overhaul.

In marketing, the introduction of AI has changed everything, from blogging and SEO to video and social media. 

Because mental health marketing is in such a state of flux, it’s important to track what’s working and what isn’t. The last thing you want to do is invest thousands (or tens of thousands) of dollars into marketing that isn’t bringing in new clients.

A Marketing Audit Helps You Save Money

Additionally, auditing your marketing helps you save money. An audit could alert you to ways you’re overspending on ads or pursuing dead-ends with your SEO strategy.

It can also show you if your website is a conversion engine or if it falls flat with site visitors.

Audit Your Marketing Efforts for Competitive Advantage

Lastly, by conducting regular marketing audits, you give your clinic a competitive advantage. By joining the roughly 1 in 4 clinics that conduct monthly marketing audits, you can outpace your competitors that avoid this task.

Now, what does a marketing audit entail for clinics like yours?

What is a MH or BH Clinic Marketing Audit? 

The good news is that every little nook and cranny of digital marketing can be tracked.

Every time someone clicks on an ad, reads a blog, reaches out via email, and more, you get clues to the efficacy of your marketing strategy.

A monthly marketing audit is a deep dive into your clinic’s entire marketing ecosystem. But what exactly does it entail?

A marketing audit systematically reviews all aspects of your marketing strategies, from your website copy and messaging to your SEO, to the nitty-gritty details of your social media analytics.

It provides a comprehensive picture of what’s working, and what isn’t, and most crucially, it lays out clear pathways for optimization. A marketing audit also provides insight into the synergy of your marketing channels.

Here’s what your marketing audit should cover:

  • Website Analysis: Is your site easy to navigate? Does it clearly communicate your services and value proposition to your potential clients? Does it put your ideal client front and center?
  • Blog Content: Does your content resonate with your target audience? Is it informative, engaging, and does it position your clinic as a thought leader in mental/behavioral health care?
  • Social Media: How are your social platforms performing? Are you engaging effectively with your community, and are your posts driving action? How can you improve this aspect of your marketing strategy?
  • SEO: Are you maximizing your visibility in search engines? Are you checking all the boxes for your content? Is your site speed enabling or crippling success?
  • Paid Advertising: Are your ad dollars being spent wisely? Which campaigns have the highest ROI, and why? What are some ways you might be able to increase the efficacy of your ads?

Conducting a marketing audit allows you to make informed decisions, rather than relying on guesswork.

It identifies wasted resources, uncovers hidden opportunities, and aligns your marketing efforts with your business goals.

If you’re thinking this sounds complex, you’re right—and that’s why many clinics turn to professionals. Contact us today for a free consultation and start building your custom growth plan.

Before Auditing: Define Your Marketing and Business Goals

One last stop before you learn how to do a marketing audit.

As always, it’s important to know where you want to go if you hope to get there.

That’s why I recommend setting SMART goals for your marketing channels. This will not only steer your efforts in the right direction but also provide measurable targets to know when you’re reaching success.

What are SMART Goals? SMART goals are goals that are specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound. This framework provides clear milestones and deadlines.

  • Specific: Clearly define what you want to accomplish with each of your marketing efforts. Instead of a broad goal like “increase awareness,” aim for “increase website traffic by 30%.”
  • Measurable: Attach numbers or clear indicators to measure progress. For instance, “achieve a 20% increase in new patient inquiries via our Google Ads.”
  • Achievable: Set goals that are challenging yet attainable within your current resources and market constraints. For a medium-sized clinic, this could be something like “hire a new psychotherapist within the next 6 months as our demand increases.”
  • Relevant: Align your marketing goals with your overall business objectives. If your clinic specializes in helping mothers with postpartum depression, create goals around this. Don’t create goals around helping men with anger, for example.
  • Time-bound: Set a definitive timeframe for each goal. Quarterly goals keep your strategies agile, while annual and long-term goals drive broader strategic shifts.

Time-Bound Goals for MH/BH Clinics

Let’s stop on that last note for a second. When setting time-bound goals, what time frames are most helpful?

Quarterly Planning: Set a calendar reminder every 13 weeks to review your quarterly goals. Use the results from your monthly audits, as well as market changes, to adjust course. Being aware of whether or not you’re reaching your goals is the start of meaningful progress.

Examples of quarterly goals:

  • Attract 10 new therapy clients via paid ads
  • Create 6 new service or specialty pages for your website
  • Add 13 new blogs to your website

Yearly Goals: Once per year, review your yearly goals. I recommend setting the date and having an accountability partner, or doing this with your leadership team so you don’t put it off (human nature, am I right?) When reviewing your yearly goals, see how close or far you are from hitting each goal. Prioritize goals for the next year and work to achieve them. Keeping yearly goals in mind will guide your marketing strategy audit.

Examples of yearly goals:

  • Hire 2 therapists and 1 part-time psychiatrist
  • Move to a bigger space in a centrally-located area
  • Speak at 5 conferences
  • Host 2 community events
  • Go on a company-wide wellness retreat

Long-term Vision: Beyond immediate gains, consider where you want your clinic to be in the next 3, 5, or 10 years. Setting long-term goals helps in building a sustainable growth plan that goes beyond short-term tactics. For example, based on the emerging field of ketamine-assisted psychotherapy, consider now if you’d like to plan to offer this service at some point down the line.

Examples of long-term goals:

  • Open another physical location, expand to another state
  • Partner with local governments on mental health initiatives
  • Transition 2-5 therapists to supervisor roles for greater impact
  • Develop a specialty program for combat veterans or abused children
  • Lower the cost to acquire a client by 25% via increasing operational efficiency

Defining your clinic’s goals before conducting your marketing audit provides a clear lens through which to view your data and results. It allows you to focus your audit on what matters most, ensuring your marketing plan is both effective and efficient.

How to Do a Comprehensive Marketing Audit for Your Clinic

Now it’s time for the brass tacks. In this section, you’ll read about the most common and effective marketing channels for mental and behavioral health clinics.

By the end, you’ll walk away with clear knowledge of what to audit, how to audit, and even which tools you can use. Let’s hop to it.

Ideal Client Persona(s)

While not a marketing channel per se, this is a foundational piece of all of your marketing. Your ideal client persona tells you exactly who you are trying to attract to your clinic.

For example, your ideal client persona could be Eliza, a mother of 3 and an attorney in Atlanta who struggles with depression and low self-worth. Eliza believes she is a burden to others, is not a leader, and is never “enough.” Lastly, Eliza reads articles online about depression and is motivated to improve her relationship with herself and her children.

By going in-depth on who you want to work with, you can create more effective messaging for all of your marketing channels. This leads to a cheaper customer acquisition cost (CAC). That’s why building and honing your ideal client persona is first on your audit.

When auditing your ideal client persona, here are some questions to consider:

  1. Do you already have an ideal client persona in your current marketing strategy?
  2. Does your clinic cater to multiple types of clients? How many distinct kinds of clients? Having multiple ideal client personas will help fine-tune your marketing and make it much more effective.
  3. Has your ideal client changed since you last considered it? If yes, add depth, nuance, and any changes that you may have noticed. Don’t be afraid to start from scratch, as this is the foundation for all of your marketing.

When creating your ideal client persona, gather data and make notes for each of these aspects of your persona:

  • Job titles or functions
  • Industry
  • Single, dating, or married
  • Do they have children? If yes, how many?
  • Geographic location (often your areas of service)
  • Demographic
  • Motivations to improve/change
  • Objections to starting your service
  • What media channels do they frequent
  • What they currently do to solve their problems
  • Things they may have tried in the past
  • Persona quotes/things they would say

Create this document and pull it out every time you create new marketing campaigns and materials.

If you’re unsure of some of the answers, brainstorm with your team about your favorite 3-5 clients and see what they have in common. Then develop a persona that draws from each of these clients.

Don’t skip your client personas! They make every other marketing action you take more effective. And they’ll drive the success of your marketing campaigns going forward.

Website Copy

Website copy is all of the text on your website.

While we’ll handle SEO in an upcoming section, it’s important to call out your website copy here.

What to audit for:

  1. Are you speaking to your ideal client persona in your website copy? Avoid speaking to people in general. Instead, write more targeted copy that will connect with the specific readers you hope to work with.
  2. Is your copy written in layman’s terms? Often, clients don’t understand or resonate with therapy speak, psychobabble, or jargon that a professional would use. Make sure your copy “clicks” with your reader. If you’re not sure, ask a friend or family member who isn’t versed in the mental/behavioral health space. Do they understand it easily?
  3. What’s the reading difficulty? We’re not writing a college textbook on your website. Make sure your website copy is easy to digest by aiming for 7th-grade reading difficulty, using short sentences and paragraphs, and choosing simple words over complex ones. I recommend you use the Hemingway app to ensure your copy is easy for all readers.
  4. How much do you say “I” or “we?” If the copy is focused on you, readers won’t feel a connection. It’s much better to stick to the pronoun “you” or to avoid pronouns altogether. Some copywriters even say that you should say “you” ten times more than “I” or “we” to maintain the connection with your audience.
  5. You should have at minimum a home page, multiple service/specialty pages (think 10+), about pages for each team member, and a contact page. How does your site measure up? What needs work? Does your experience shine through in your current marketing efforts?
  6. Does your website have calls to action? CTA buttons help your reader take the next step, whether that’s reaching out for a free consultation or booking a service via your website. Litter these throughout each page of your website, trying to keep a CTA on screen as often as possible.

Using your ideal client persona to write effective website copy is the strongest foundation for marketing. Once your audit is done, this is the first thing you should work on. Effective, resonant website copy is one of your best marketing assets and only needs to be done once.

Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

You have a website, so it needs to be optimized for SEO. Otherwise, how will new clients find it?

SEO can seem like a big scary monster to some. But it’s important to audit your SEO to gain clarity around what’s working and how best to invest future efforts. Gather data around SEO and see if you’re reaching your marketing goals.

To audit your SEO efforts, you’ll need a few tools, some free and some paid.

  1. Google Search Console. This free tool from Google will help you track important metrics from the SERP, such as impressions, clicks, and average position. Monitoring these metrics every month will give you the insights you need to reach the top positions and get site visitors.
  2. Google Analytics (GA4). Another free tool from Google, GA4 will help you see what your top pages are, where your traffic is coming from, and provide insights into how users are interacting with your website.
  3. Ahrefs or SEMrush. These tools have free and paid versions. They will help you do keyword research, track how many keywords you’re ranking for, and find ways to improve your rankings. These tools are also necessary for building a content plan and seeking high-quality backlinks.
  4. GT Metrix. This is a tool with a limited number of free uses. GT Metrix helps you gauge your website’s speed and performance, which are critical aspects of SEO. A slow website will hurt your rankings.

Tracking your SEO performance every month will help you stay on the right track and find new ways to win. Luckily, SEO is an easy channel on which to conduct an internal marketing audit.

More considerations when doing your SEO audit:

  • What are the top 20 high-intent keywords you need to target? For example, if you specialize in eating disorders, you want to target the keywords “eating disorder therapist near me” and “eating disorder therapist” + the biggest city your practice in.
  • Do you have services/specialty pages for each of your 20 high-intent keywords?
  • If pursuing local SEO rankings, do you have relevant “service area” pages? For example, “online therapy Chicago.”
  • Do you include other hard-to-rank-for keywords in your team member pages, such as “female therapist near me”?
  • How can you improve the internal linking of your website? Linking between pages will improve your ability to show up for local searches, and it improves user experience. Aim to link to every major page of your website from the main navigation, the footer, and your home page.
  • Do you have your name, address, and phone (NAP) listed on your website?
  • Do you have CTAs on each page of your website to promote conversions?
  • Is your website optimized for mobile? Over half of people who use the internet do so from their phones, so this is essential. No website is complete without mobile optimization.

SEO is a behemoth in marketing. Once you start to rank highly, you can be rewarded for years with new clients. Also, it’s a great hedge against the increasing cost of Google Ads. If SEO isn’t part of your current marketing strategy, add it to your marketing plan.

I wouldn’t blame you if auditing your SEO seems like too much to manage. If you’d like help here, contact Beacon Media + Marketing today to improve your audit and get a free growth strategy.

Auditing Your Social Media Marketing Strategy

There are half a dozen or so social media platforms that you can use to market your clinic.

Assuming you’ve already chosen your preferred platform(s), here’s how to do a social media marketing audit process:

  1. Gather the following information (per social media channel).
  • Profile information (name and URL)
  • Engagement metrics
  • Publishing metrics
  • Audience demographics
  • Referral traffic
  • Channel specific metrics
  1. Evaluate platform performance.
    See which platform brings you the most engagement, and ultimately the most conversions of new clients. It’s one thing to get shares, likes, and impressions but no conversions. It’s another to have conversions.
  2. Analyze audience engagement.
    Note the types of content that your audience engages with most. Also, note the type of content that falls flat with your audience. This will help you adjust your strategy later.
  3. Ensure visual consistency.
    If your social media presence doesn’t have visual consistency, clients will not be able to develop a good connection to your clinic. Ensuring visual consistency is one of the biggest improvements you can make to your social media marketing.
  4. Compare your results to what you can see from a similar-sized clinic.
    If you’re underperforming relative to a similar-sized competitor, note this. Jot down a few ideas of why that might be.

If you need help auditing your social media marketing, consider using a trusted tool like HootSuite or Sprout Social.

Once you’ve completed your audit, make notes about ways to improve your marketing strategy. We’ll talk about this more in a later section.

Email Marketing

It’s important to nurture prospects who show an interest in your services. This is where email marketing shines.

Marketing experts say it takes 7 contacts for a new prospect to make a purchase. You may not get to this threshold if you’re not gathering email addresses from people who visit your website.

Here are the most important metrics to track for your email marketing:

  1. Clickthrough Rate
  2. Open Rate
  3. Conversion Rate
  4. Bounce Rate
  5. List Growth Rate
  6. Email Sharing/Forwarding Rate
  7. Overall ROI
  8. Unsubscribe Rate

When auditing, make sure to consider the following questions:

  1. Are you writing with your ideal client persona in mind? If not, expect watered-down results.
  2. What’s your sending cadence? Once per week, five times per week, or other?
  3. Are you A/B testing your emails? What aspects of the emails are you A/B testing?
  4. How are you getting new subscribers? 
  5. Do you have a free lead magnet to give to new subscribers?

Email marketing has a high ROI of 36x. It’s important to get your email marketing strategy fine-tuned so you’re serving the most clients possible (while not leaving money on the table).

Google and Facebook Ads

Auditing your ad spend and efficacy will help you keep costs low, while still converting enough clients to stay full.

Ads are one of the most popular marketing methods due to their automatability, scalability, and power to convert new clients.

Take each ad channel separately, then audit for these metrics:

Google Ads Metrics

Click-Through Rate (CTR): This measures how often people who see your ad end up clicking it. CTR is a good indicator of how relevant and appealing your ads are to your target audience.

Conversion Rate: This tracks how many clicks on your ad result in a desired action, such as filling out a contact form or making a purchase. It helps assess the effectiveness of your ad in driving conversions.

Cost Per Click (CPC): This measures the average cost you pay each time someone clicks on your ad. Monitoring CPC helps manage your budget and determine the cost-effectiveness of your campaign.

Quality Score: Google’s rating of the quality and relevance of both your keywords and PPC ads. A higher quality score can lead to lower CPCs and better ad positions.

Impression Share: The percentage of impressions your ads receive compared to the total number they are eligible to receive. Low impression share could indicate bid issues or irrelevant keywords.

Cost Per Conversion/Acquisition (CPA): This metric measures how much it costs to acquire a customer. It’s crucial to understand the ROI of your Google Ads campaigns.

Facebook Ads Metrics

Reach and Frequency: Reach measures the number of unique users who see your ad, while frequency shows how often the same user sees your ad. These metrics help you understand your ad’s exposure and the saturation of your messaging.

Engagement Rate: This includes likes, comments, shares, and other interactions. High engagement rates are often indicative of content that resonates well with your audience.

Click-Through Rate (CTR): Like Google Ads, this measures the effectiveness of your ad in compelling users to click through to your website or landing page.

Conversion Rate: Tracks the percentage of people who clicked on your ad and then completed a desired action on your website. This is essential for evaluating the success of your ad in driving meaningful actions.

Cost Per Click (CPC) and Cost Per Thousand Impressions (CPM): CPC and CPM measure the cost-effectiveness of your ads based on clicks and impressions, respectively. These are critical for budget management.

Return on Ad Spend (ROAS): This is the total revenue generated for every dollar spent on advertising. ROAS is vital for understanding the overall profitability of your Facebook ad campaigns.

Ad Creative Performance: Analyze which types of ad creatives (images, videos, text) perform best. This can inform future creative decisions.

General Best Practices

Segmentation: Look at these metrics segmented by demographics, location, device, and other relevant factors to understand who your ads are most effective with and under what circumstances.

Trends Over Time: Evaluate how these metrics change over time to understand your campaigns’ long-term effectiveness and identify any seasonal fluctuations in performance.

A/B Testing Results: Regularly test different versions of your ads to see which elements work best and refine your approach based on data-driven insights.

By closely monitoring these metrics, you can gain a deep understanding of your ad performance on both Google and Facebook, allowing you to optimize your campaigns for better results and more efficient use of your advertising budget.

Google Business Profile (GBP)

Ranking well for local searches can help your clinic show up in the Google Map pack.

That’s the three or so businesses that pop up for local searches, such as “anxiety therapy near me.”

Here’s how to audit your GBP:

  1. Make sure you only have one listing. Having multiple listings can send mixed signals to Google, which will only hurt your ability to be discovered by potential clients. It can take a few days to claim an old listing, so be sure to start this process right away.
  2. Ensure your business name, address, phone, and website link are all correct.
  3. Note how many reviews you have and their averages.
  4. Do you have high-quality photos of both inside and outside your clinic?
  5. Is your listing description well-written and does it include local keywords?
  6. Have you responded to all reviews, both positive and negative?
  7. When was the last time you posted an update? If it’s been more than 3 months, make sure to schedule an update.
  8. Have you completed the Q&A section?
  9. Do each of your clinicians have their own GBP listing? If not, help them each create one, and link each back to your website. This will expand the number of ways new clients can find your clinic.

By the end of your audit, you should have several ideas on how to strengthen your listing and attract new clients.

The good thing about auditing your GBP is that it’s much simpler than Google Ads or SEO.

Therapist Directories

How are your directory listings performing?

Directories are a good way to get clients without breaking the bank. Sure, they won’t fill your entire caseload, but having a few directory profiles does help fill in some gaps.

The most common directories for therapists include Psychology Today, Therapy Den, Zen Care, Mental Health Match, Best Therapists, and more.

You’re paying for these listings, so it’s important to know if they’re pulling their own weight. Here’s how to run an audit:

  1. List out each of your clinician’s directory profiles.
  2. Have each clinician send you a screenshot from their dashboard. This is where you can see how many prospects have reached out.
  3. No directory at the time of this writing can track how many prospects become clients. To track conversions, you’ll have to closely track all incoming calls to your clinic and each clinician. Which directory did they come from if any?

This is an optional marketing channel to track. As long as you’re getting 1 client who completes 2 to 4 sessions each year, most directory listings are worth the cost. Feel free to ballpark this marketing channel and check in every quarter rather than every month.

Referral Marketing

This is the old-school marketing strategy for therapists and clinics.

You’ll want to track your referral marketing because… well, it’s one of the only free marketing channels you have!

And according to the 2024 State of Mental Health Marketing Report, 31% of respondents rank referral marketing as having the best ROI.

You’ll have to track your referral marketing in a spreadsheet or CRM. Here’s how to audit it:

  1. See how many referral partners you have.
  2. Check the number of referral clients who reach out from each referral partner.
  3. Look for partners and partner clinics that you need to check in with.
  4. Brainstorm new referral partners to contact.

Referral marketing is often forgotten, but it works amazingly well if you invest in your relationships.

Just remember to refer weak-fit clients to your partners as well.

What to Do with the Results of Your Audit?

Once you’ve completed your comprehensive marketing audit, it’s critical to translate the data collected into actionable insights. This stage is where strategic decision-making comes into play, helping you refine your marketing efforts to better target your desired audience and achieve your clinic’s goals.

Here’s how to proceed with the results:

Summarize and Make Recommendations

Create a Summary Report

Compile the findings from your audit into a structured report that highlights key insights, successes, and areas for improvement. This report should be clear and concise, providing an overview that is easily understandable for all stakeholders. Even a simple Google Doc with your recommendations, organized by marketing channel, can be enough.

Identify Trends and Patterns

Look for common themes or recurring issues that may have surfaced during the audit. This might involve underperforming marketing channels, standout strategies that are yielding good ROI, or gaps in your marketing tactics. Then consider if you want to double down on a strategy, change it, or pause it for some time.

Make Strategic Recommendations

Based on your findings, suggest actionable changes or enhancements. This might include reallocating your ad budget, realigning your content strategy, or upgrading your tools.

Address Budget and Resource Conflicts

Evaluate Budget Allocation

Assess how your current marketing budget is being spent versus the return it’s generating. Identify any misallocations of funds and suggest adjustments that align spending with the most effective marketing strategies identified in the audit.

Resource Reallocation

Consider whether your resources — such as staff time and technology tools — are being optimized. If certain areas are resource-heavy but yield low returns, it might be time to redistribute these resources to more impactful activities.

Plan for Necessary Investments

Sometimes, gaps identified during an audit might require new investments, such as hiring additional staff, investing in new software, or increasing the budget for high-performing channels. Plan how to integrate these costs into your budget effectively.

Schedule Your Next Marketing Audit

Set a Date for the Next Audit

Marketing is continuously evolving, and regular audits are essential to stay on top of trends and adjust strategies accordingly. Schedule your next audit in advance, making it a recurring event on your calendar. At Beacon, we recommend a monthly audit cycle. Marketing is too important not to track often.

Establish Ongoing Monitoring

Implement systems or routines for monitoring key metrics and marketing performance between audits. This ongoing monitoring will help you catch issues before they become problematic and allow for minor adjustments without waiting for the next full audit.

Encourage Team Feedback

Involve your marketing team and other stakeholders in the review process. Their insights and feedback can provide additional perspectives on what’s working and what isn’t, leading to more comprehensive improvements.

By systematically analyzing the results of your marketing audit, making informed recommendations, and planning for subsequent audits, you can ensure that your marketing strategies remain robust. When it comes to marketing audits, be proactive.

Use Monthly Marketing Audits to Grow Your Clinic

Throughout this guide, we’ve seen why it’s important to make monthly marketing audits for mental and behavioral health clinics.

The landscape of mental health marketing is changing before our eyes. It’s essential to audit your marketing monthly to remain competitive and profitable. Monthly marketing audits provide your clinic with agility, cost-effectiveness, and high ROI.

Importantly, audits allow you to identify what marketing strategies are working, which need refinement, and which should be discontinued. Audits ensure that every marketing dollar spent is an investment toward your clinic’s growth and success.

Key takeaways:

  • Define your SMART goals for your marketing efforts before beginning an audit.
  • Examine all of your marketing channels—from website and SEO to social media and paid advertising—to gather a holistic view of your clinic’s online presence.
  • Audits are worth the effort—they help you save money by reducing inefficiencies, enhancing your understanding of your target audience, and staying ahead of the competition.

As we conclude, remember that the ultimate goal of these audits is to ensure that your marketing efforts are as effective and efficient as possible, aligning closely with your clinic’s mission and business objectives. By making monthly audits a staple in your marketing strategy, you position your clinic to thrive in an increasingly competitive and ever-changing industry.

Need help conducting a marketing audit? Let Beacon Media + Marketing conduct the audit for you and set you up with a free growth plan.