Physician Practice Marketing that Gives Your Site that Much Needed "Face-Lift"

Web development that is beautiful on the inside as well as the outside. You know face-lifts. We know face-lifts.

Many Web sites for cosmetic and plastic surgeons unfortunately suffer from a myriad of design and execution flaws, resulting in poorly ranked pages in all major search engines. Even worse, cosmetic and plastic surgeons often don't know this, as they've taken design and content cues from individuals not particularly well-skilled at physician practice marketing Web design techniques. Sure, many of these sites may look pleasing to the eye, but pulling back the layers within these Web sites reveals common errors and mistakes not caught by the average Web developer, designer, or content writer. As a result, cosmeticSEO.com can re-engineer your Web site, giving it a much needed "face-lift" necessary for gaining exposure and higher rankings within the search engines. The approach is truly unique, working with each client every step of the way in re-engineering your site. It's all part of a custom marketing kit implemented for your practice that is highly effective and really does work.

Your existing Web site will go through an exhaustive checklist of items for identifying gaps, deficiencies, and weaknesses commonly found by cosmeticSEO.com. As part of our physician practice marketing activities, a host of recommendations will be made, followed by careful execution for improving your site's indexing and ranking within the major search engines. Your new, improved Web site is just the start, as a number of activities will be carried out on a daily basis for ensuring your site's success.

In short, your Web site is examined from top to bottom, leaving nothing to spare — it's just another example of what makes cosmeticSEO.com different when implementing proven physician practice marketing techniques for your Web site.

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Look under the hood.

For a quick diagnostic of your current Web site, view the source code of any given page.

If you can't separate the meaningful content from the structural markup tags, then your Web site is suffering from something we like to call "code bloat." If it's hard for you to read the material, think how hard it is for the search engine spiders – automated robots who are constructed to emulate human end-users to the nth degree.

Marketing Your Practice