Most medical SEO advice is written for a fictional average physician. It treats a cardiologist and a cosmetic dermatologist as equivalent problems with equivalent search audiences. They aren't.
The way patients search for care is shaped by urgency, awareness, and the nature of the condition. A patient with chest pain is not comparison-shopping. A patient considering rhinoplasty will read eight pages before booking a consultation. A parent looking for a pediatrician is weighing proximity, insurance, and reviews simultaneously. These are fundamentally different search journeys — and your SEO strategy should reflect them.
There are three dimensions where specialty changes your approach:
- Keyword structure: Some specialties are organized around named procedures (rotator cuff repair, MOHS surgery). Others are organized around conditions (eczema, atrial fibrillation). Others are organized around patient demographics (newborn care, geriatric cardiology). Your content architecture should mirror how patients actually name what they need.
- Competitive pressure: Elective and cosmetic specialties attract heavy paid advertising, which compresses organic click-through rates on broad terms. Specialties with lower elective volume often have thinner competition and faster organic traction.
- Content depth expectations: Patients making high-stakes or high-cost decisions — joint replacement, fertility treatment, cardiac procedures — research extensively before they call. Pages that answer ten questions outperform pages that answer two.
Understanding these dimensions before you write a single piece of content or build a single citation is the difference between an SEO program that generates new patients and one that generates traffic with no revenue attached.
Note: All content strategies discussed here should be reviewed against HIPAA privacy rules, FTC advertising guidelines, and your state medical board's advertising standards. This is educational content, not legal or compliance advice.