There’s a man awake right now, somewhere around two in the morning, typing the truest sentence he’s said all year into a chatbot. He hasn’t said it to his wife. He hasn’t said it to his best friend of thirty years. He definitely hasn’t said it to a therapist, because he’s never called one. But he’ll say it to ChatGPT, because ChatGPT won’t flinch, won’t worry, won’t look at him differently at breakfast.
We keep framing this as an AI problem. I think we’ve got it backwards.
Why are men telling their secrets to a machine?
Here’s what I keep coming back to. The men using AI as a stand-in for therapy aren’t doing it because they ran the comparison and decided the algorithm gives better care. They’re doing it because the chatbot is the first door that doesn’t cost them anything to walk through. No copay. No waitlist. And the part nobody wants to name out loud: no witness.
Think about everything we ask of a man before he ever sits across from a therapist. Book an appointment, which means admitting out loud that he needs one. Take time off work, which means explaining the absence or inventing a story to cover it. Drive across town. Sit in a waiting room where someone might recognize his truck. Come back next week and do it all over again. The chatbot asks for none of that. It’s there at 2 a.m. on a Tuesday and 6 a.m. on a Sunday, on the phone that’s already in his pocket.
And it never judges him. Nobody’s nagging. If he takes half the advice and ignores the rest, the machine doesn’t bring it up next session. No disappointed look. No “did you try what we talked about?” He can take what’s useful, leave what isn’t, and move at his own pace without feeling like he’s letting anybody down. For a lot of men, that freedom is worth more than the advice itself.
There’s one more piece, and I think it’s the one we underestimate most. Ask the machine a question and you get an answer. Right now. Clean, confident, step-by-step. And that fits how most men are built. Men are wired to solve problems; it’s where they’re most comfortable, it’s often how they show love and how they communicate. Where women typically want to talk through our problems and process it, men usually want to get their hands on a solution as fast as possible. Therapy, in his mind, is the talk-it-through path: slow, open-ended, messy, months of digging before anything gets fixed. The bot hands him the thing his brain was looking for all along. A solve.
Now, are all of those barriers real? Some absolutely are. Some are stories men tell themselves. Here’s the thing though: it doesn’t matter. A barrier a man believes in works exactly like a barrier that exists. He doesn’t show up either way.
For a lot of men, the hardest part of getting help was never the help itself. It was being seen needing it.
The bot isn’t winning because it’s a better therapist. It’s winning because it asks nothing of a man’s pride.
I grew up in Alaska, in a culture where you find a way through your own problems. Under it, around it, over it, through it. There’s a lot I love about that grit. But I’ve also watched what it does to men who absorb the lesson a little too well, the ones who decide that needing another person is the one obstacle they’re not allowed to admit exists. My dad was a therapist for more than thirty years. I grew up around the language of this. And even with all of that in the house, I understood early that asking for help reads as weakness to a whole lot of people, and especially men.
So when a tool shows up that lets a man unload the thing he’s been carrying without a single human knowing he needed to, of course he uses it. That’s not a flaw. That’s relief and honestly, we shouldn’t be surprised.
What is the chatbot actually replacing?
Let me be honest with you. When I first started hearing about men running their own “therapy sessions” through AI, my gut reaction was the same as most people in behavioral health. Concern, a little alarm, the urge to put out a warning. And those concerns are real, we’ll get to them across this month. But I made myself sit with a harder question first.
What is the AI actually replacing in that man’s life?
Because for most of these guys, it isn’t replacing a therapist. There was no therapist. It isn’t replacing a hard conversation with a spouse. That conversation was never going to happen. The honest answer, most of the time, is that the chatbot is replacing silence. It’s replacing the version of that man who said nothing to anyone and white-knuckled his way through another year.
When you realize the AI is replacing silence and not a therapist, the whole picture changes shape.
And that reframes everything for those of us who market behavioral health practices. We’ve spent years building campaigns that gently encourage men to reach out, to make the call, to take the first step. We assumed the gap was awareness. Tell them help exists, lower the stigma, and they’ll pick up the phone.
The men talking to robots at 2 a.m. are telling us the gap was never entirely awareness. They knew help existed. The gap was the threshold. The phone call itself was the wall. And we built almost every one of our front doors to require that exact phone call as the price of entry, either to make the appointment or for intake.
Did men ever really refuse to get help?
There’s a story we’ve told for decades. Men won’t get help. Men don’t talk. Men bottle it up until something breaks. And there’s a painful truth in it: the numbers on male suicide have been heartbreaking and stubborn for years, and the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention keeps documenting a gap that should stop all of us cold.
But watch what’s happening now that a zero-friction, zero-witness option exists. Men are leveraging it. They’re not refusing to talk. They’re talking constantly, pouring things into these tools that they’ve never said to a living soul. Pew Research has tracked how fast AI tools moved into daily life, and behind those adoption numbers are a lot of people having conversations they wouldn’t have anywhere else.
So maybe the story was never quite right. Maybe it wasn’t that men refused to get help. It’s that they refused to get help the only way we offered it, out loud, in person, on the record, with another human watching them admit they couldn’t handle it alone.
That’s a marketing failure as much as a cultural one. And marketing failures we can fix.
So what does a practice do with this?
Here’s where the real work begins, and I want to be careful, because this is the part where it’s tempting to reach for a clever tactic. This isn’t a tactics problem. It’s a threshold problem. The question for any practice serious about reaching men is brutally simple: how do you lower the cost of the first step until it’s lower than the cost of staying silent?
A few honest places to start.
Stop making the phone call the front door. A man who will type his darkest thought to a machine at 2 a.m. is not going to call your front desk at 9 a.m. and explain himself to a receptionist. If your only intake path assumes someone will dial a number and talk, you are designed to lose exactly the people you most want to reach. Text-based intake, a private form, an async first contact, these aren’t conveniences. For this audience they’re the entire ballgame.
Meet them where they’re at. I’ve been saying this for years, and I keep saying it because no matter how much the tools change, it keeps proving to be the answer. The man you want to reach is already online, already typing, already at 2 a.m. on his phone. Your website is the thing he’ll find before he ever finds you. If it reads like a brochure for people who already feel okay about getting help, you’ve missed him. If it reads like it was written by someone who understands why he’s been avoiding this, you’ve got a shot.
Make sure you’re findable in the exact moment he’s looking. When that same man finally types “do I need therapy or am I overthinking this” into a search bar or an AI tool, your practice either surfaces as a trustworthy human answer or it doesn’t exist to him. That’s not luck. That’s the unglamorous, technical, genuinely complicated work of being discoverable at the moment of need, and it’s a long way from “post on social and hope.”
And I’ll be the first to admit this is more involved than it looks from the outside. We test this stuff on Beacon before we roll it out to a client, and even we are constantly adjusting as the way people search keeps shifting under our feet. We’re all kind of figuring this out together. Anybody who tells you they’ve got the AI-era playbook fully solved is probably just trying to sell you something.
Why this matters more than your booking rate
I could tell you that fixing your front door will improve your conversion numbers, and it will. But that’s not the reason that keeps me up.
The reason is that man at 2 a.m. Right now, the most honest thing in his life is happening in a conversation with software that will, no matter how warm it sounds, never actually know him. It can’t call him next week to see how he’s doing. It can’t notice he’s gone quiet. It can’t sit in the hard silence with him and let it mean something. It will agree with him when he most needs someone who won’t.
He deserves a human on the other end of that honesty. And the only thing standing between him and that human is a threshold we built too high and never thought to lower.
The goal was never to beat the chatbot. The goal is to be the next door he walks through after it.
That’s the opportunity hiding inside all of this. These men have shown us they’re willing to be honest. They’ve shown us they will reach out. And don’t miss what that took: even typing the truth to a chatbot costs a man something. They paid it. They’ve handed us the map. We just have to be brave enough, and human enough, to build the door they’ll actually walk through. Where there’s great challenge, there’s great opportunity. This is one of the biggest I’ve seen in behavioral health in years.
So here’s my question for you, especially if you run a practice or market one: when you look at your own front door, the very first step you ask a struggling man to take, is it lower than the cost of his silence? Or are we still asking him to do the one thing he’s spent his whole life avoiding before we’ll even let him in?
I’d love to hear what you’re seeing. Hit me back and tell me what reaching men actually looks like in your practice right now.