You’re sitting with a coffee behind your laptop.
You type into ChatGPT:
“Which clinic in [your region] specializes in acne scar treatments?”
And there it is.
Your competitor’s name.
Not yours.
You have better equipment. More experience. Maybe even better reviews.
So why are you not being mentioned?
Coincidence?
No
There is no “advertise button” for ChatGPT
Let’s make this clear first:
You cannot pay to appear in AI answers.
There is no campaign setting.
No bidding system.
AI systems recommend based on probability.
So the real question is not:
“How do I rank higher?”
The real question is:
“Why does AI consider my competitor a more logical answer than me?”
AI does not think like Google
Google shows a list of results.
AI gives a single summarized answer.
That difference is critical.
An AI system does not only look at:
- who ranks highest
- who advertises the most
It evaluates patterns:
It combines:
- depth of content
- reputation beyond your website
- consistency of business information
- clarity of your specialization online
The most coherent and convincing entity gets mentioned.
The hard truth: most clinics are vague online
Most clinic websites say things like:
- “We specialize in skin improvement”
- “We provide personalized care”
- “We use the latest technology”
But they rarely explain:
- which types of acne scars they treat
- which laser technologies they use
- differences between treatment options
- who is not a good candidate
- realistic outcomes
For humans, this feels acceptable.
For AI, it is content-free.
And empty content is not recommended.
Why your competitor might be mentioned instead
In practice, we often see this difference:
Clinic A:
- 6 thin treatment pages
- generic marketing copy
- 18 reviews
- few external mentions
Clinic B:
- in-depth pages per treatment
- strong FAQ sections
- 60+ recent reviews
- mentions in local media
- clear specialization signals
Which one looks more authoritative for a query like:
Who specializes in X in region Y?”
AI usually selects the most complete and consistent profile.
Not necessarily the best clinic.
But the clearest one.
What you need to understand
Being visible in ChatGPT is not a trick.
It is the result of four factors:
- Clear online identity
Same name, address, and specialization everywhere. No variation.
- Real content depth
Not selling—but explaining. Including risks and limitations.
- External validation
Reviews, mentions, and third-party signals.
- Structure
Clear pages, logical hierarchy, no messy content.
If one of these is missing, your visibility weakens.
Practical example
A mid-sized clinic in Ghent specializing in hair pigmentation asked:
When they asked various AI systems:
“Which clinic in Ghent specializes in Micro Hair Pigmentation?”
They were not mentioned.
Why?
- 400-word treatment page
- no explanation of causes
- no comparison of techniques
- only 29 reviews
- no external mentions
Within four months, we implemented:
- in-depth treatment pages per core service
- +80 new reviews
- structured FAQ sections
- technical website cleanup
- explicit specialization positioning
After that, they started appearing in AI answers more consistently.
Not always.
But significantly more often.
No magic.
Just positioning.
What does NOT work
- claiming you are “the best”
- asking ChatGPT to remember your name
- publishing generic blog content
- focusing only on Google Ads
- assuming this is a temporary trend
AI-driven discovery is becoming more important every year.
The question is not if patients use it.
The question is when it becomes standard.
The real strategic question
If someone asks tomorrow:
“Which clinic in [your region] specializes in [your key treatment]?”
Will your clinic be mentioned?
If not:
Is that because of your clinical quality?
Or because of your lack of online clarity?
Conclusion
Visibility in ChatGPT is not a separate marketing channel.
It is the outcome of:
- strong topical authority
- consistent positioning
- external validation
- structured, meaningful content
Clinics that have this in place are naturally mentioned more often.
Not because AI favors them.
But because they are the most logically relevant answer.
We can analyze your online presence and show exactly where you are losing visibility—and how to fix it.