Your future patients have stopped scrolling ten blue links. They open ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google's AI Overview and ask one question — "What's the best med spa in Fort Worth for Botox?" — and act on the single short list the AI hands back.
That's a problem and an opening. The clinics that get cited in AI answers over the next few months will compound a lead that's very hard to unseat. In Fort Worth, almost no independent practice has claimed it yet.
You've earned what most clinics chase for years: hundreds of five-star Google reviews, a "Best Spa" win from Fort Worth Magazine, and a nurse-owner brand patients trust. But when an answer engine assembles a recommendation, it doesn't read your awards page — it reads the structured facts behind your site: what you treat, where, by whom, at what price, in markup it can lift and attribute. On that axis, anursestouchfortworth.com gives the AI almost nothing to work with.
We checked your home, injectables, about, and contact pages — none carry LocalBusiness, MedicalBusiness, or Service markup. This is the machine-readable layer AI engines trust most to extract who you are, what you treat, and where. Without it, you're guesswork.
You've written real patient-question pages — side effects, what to expect, why fillers matter. That's great content, but with no FAQPage schema, AI answer engines can't lift those answers and attribute them to you, so recovery-time and candidacy questions get sourced from other clinics instead.
You do list prices in plain text — a real advantage over most med spas. But the numbers ($780 first Sculptra vial, $650/syringe filler, new-patient offers) sit in body copy, not in Service/Offer markup. So an AI still can't cleanly answer "how much is filler at A Nurses Touch?" — the most common high-intent buyer prompt.
anursestouchfortworth.com/llms.txt returns a 404. There's no signal telling AI crawlers what to prioritize. It's the cheapest, fastest win and you don't have it yet.
Daisy Williams, RN (owner) and your nurse team are named in body text, but their names and qualifications aren't presented in a way an AI can attribute. For medical topics, engines weight expertise and trust signals heavily — unstructured credentials weaken your citation confidence right where it matters most.
For Fort Worth aesthetic queries, answer engines lean on the sources they can parse cleanly: structured clinic sites, high review counts, and the "best med spa" lists (Yelp, ThreeBestRated, TrustAnalytica). Practices attached to a board-certified surgeon or a polished, schema-rich site get named repeatedly — even when an independent like you wins on reviews and price. With no structured layer, A Nurses Touch is at real risk of being left out of the AI's short list entirely, despite arguably being the strongest independent reputation in the market.
The guarantee: every word we publish is grounded only in facts you verify — your real services, prices, and credentials. A verification step rejects anything unsupported before it ships. No invented claims, ever. That's the difference between AEO and the "compliance widget" vendors.
A 15-minute call. We'll show you the exact pages and questions to claim first — and where competitors are already ahead in AI answers.
Book a 15-minute AI visibility call