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Marketing Blog

What Are You Actually Paying For Now That AI Can Do 65% of Marketing Tasks?

Strategy. Judgment. Specificity. Compliance. Coordination across disciplines. The marketing tasks that AI now handles are real and they are significant, but they are the production layer, not the strategic one. Practices paying for marketing in 2026 are paying for the work that determines whether all that AI assisted output actually moves the right metrics, holds…

How Should a Behavioral Health Practice Keep Its Visual Brand Consistent Across Every Platform It Uses?

By treating visual brand consistency as a system, not a series of one-off design decisions. A behavioral health practice typically shows up across six to ten digital touchpoints (website, Google Business Profile, LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook, paid ads, intake materials, email signatures, podcast or video, and increasingly AI search results) and prospective clients are seeing several…

How Should a Behavioral Health Practice Handle Photography, Consent, and HIPAA on Its Website?

Photography on a behavioral health website carries compliance weight that photography in other industries doesn’t. Real photography is the highest-trust visual asset a practice can use, but it has to be produced inside a workflow that respects PHI regulations, informed consent, and the ethical standards specific to behavioral health. Done well, real photography becomes the…

Should AI Be Used for Initial Ideation, Final Design, or Both?

AI can, and should, be used in both ideation and design, but not equally, and not without intention. The most successful brands today aren’t choosing between human creativity and artificial intelligence. They’re finding the right balance between the two, using AI to accelerate the creative process while keeping strategy, storytelling, and final decision-making firmly human-led.…

What Makes a High-Converting Mental Health Website in 2026?

Most mental health websites are built to look good. This is definitely important. But the ones that actually grow practices not only look good, they’re also built to convert. There’s a real difference. A beautiful website that buries its contact form, loads slowly on mobile, or uses clinical jargon that feels cold to someone in…

When Should a Behavioral Health Practice Use Real Staff Photos vs. Stock Photography?

Real staff photos belong on every page where the practice is making a claim about who delivers the care. Stock photography belongs in a small set of strategic, time-limited scenarios. The decision is not about budget or aesthetics. It is about which visual asset is doing the trust-building job a behavioral health website actually needs…

Should Brand Design Ever Be Fully Automated?

No. That’s the short answer. The longer answer is more interesting, because it’s not really a question about AI capability. It’s a question about what you’re actually willing to accept from your brand. What does “fully automated” actually look like? When people ask me about full automation, they usually mean something like this. Type a…

Should Your Behavioral Health Practice Use Real Photos, Stock, or AI Generated Images?

The honest answer: real staff photos first, strategic stock second, AI generated imagery rarely, and almost never for content meant to represent your practice or your team. The decision is not aesthetic. It is a trust calculation specific to behavioral health, where prospective clients are visually scanning your website for evidence that real humans run…

Why Is the About Page the Highest-Stakes Page on a Behavioral Health Website?

Because the About page is where prospective clients verify the humans behind the practice, and verifying the humans is the foundational trust judgment that determines whether the rest of the website gets read. In a content environment where AI assists the production of nearly everything online, the About page is also the single page where…