"A new client said they found me through ChatGPT. I had no idea that was even possible," shared a surprised therapist in our community last week.
This isn't just happening to one therapist—it's a growing trend we're seeing across our Breksey network. Your practice might be missing out on ideal clients simply because your online presence isn't optimized for AI discovery.
As more people turn to AI assistants with questions like "Can you recommend a therapist near me who specializes in burnout?", therapists with a strong digital presence are appearing not just in Google results, but in personalized, AI-generated recommendations.
For practice owners like you, this shift represents both an opportunity and a new dimension to consider in your practice-building strategy.
Traditional SEO has trained us to focus on specific keywords like "therapist in Brooklyn" or "CBT for anxiety"—and this approach still matters.
But AI doesn't just match keywords. It connects concepts and understands semantic relationships.
When AI processes information, it recognizes that:
This means if your online presence clearly explains who you help and how, AI tools will likely recommend you—even without an exact keyword match.
Unlike traditional search engines, AI models don't just scan for keywords—they identify entities (people, places, services) and understand the relationships between them.
When your website mentions:
You're providing AI systems with the contextual framework they need to confidently recommend you when someone asks:
"Can you find a therapist in NYC who helps exhausted professionals?"
The specificity of your online presence directly correlates with your AI discoverability.
Here are four straightforward, high-impact actions you can implement today:
Instead of: "I offer therapy for all kinds of people."
Try: "I help high-achieving adults navigate burnout, perfectionism, and anxiety."
This precision helps both AI systems and potential clients understand your specialty.
Include your neighborhood and nearby landmarks:
"My practice is located in Union Square, NYC—just one block from the 4/5/6 subway lines."
AI needs geographic context to make appropriate local recommendations.
Psychology Today, Zencare, and GoodTherapy profiles are even more important as AI reference sources. AI looks for consistent information across sources to verify credibility. Ensure your listings:
Your potential clients—and AI—aren't searching for technical terminology like "dialectical behavioral interventions." They're looking for help with everyday challenges:
Use language that resonates with real human experiences.
One Breksey therapist made a simple change—clarifying her niche on her Psychology Today profile and adding specific information about her location and client focus.
The result?
"A new client found me through ChatGPT. They said, 'I asked for a therapist for perfectionism near Union Square, and your name came up.' I hadn't even considered that possibility."
✓ Define specifically who you help
✓ Detail your exact location
✓ Use authentic, conversational language
✓ Maintain consistent messaging across all platforms
Your 30-Minute Implementation Plan:
You don't need technical expertise or hours of work—just 30 focused minutes to significantly enhance your AI discoverability.
Remember our therapist who was surprised when a client found her through ChatGPT? She's now intentionally optimizing her online presence for AI discovery—and has received three more AI-referred clients this month alone.
The future of therapy referrals extends beyond traditional search. It's about being findable—to both humans and artificial intelligence.
Will your next client find you through AI? With these simple changes, the odds are increasingly in your favor.