Frisco aesthetic patients increasingly skip the ten blue links. They open ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google's AI Overview and ask one question — "Who does the most natural Botox in Frisco?" — and act on the short list the AI hands back.
Atomic Beauty wins on the things patients say in reviews — natural results, fair prices, a beautiful office. The problem is purely structural: those strengths aren't packaged in the form answer engines read, and the directories they lean on don't mention you.
Each category is weighted by how much answer engines actually rely on it when assembling a local recommendation. Two categories could not be confirmed from the outside (see the note at the bottom) and were scored conservatively rather than guessed.
Your name, address on Legacy Dr, providers, and a deep bank of reviews are all clear to a human reader. But when an answer engine builds a recommendation, it pulls specific, structured facts — services, prices, credentials, conditions treated — and confidently attributes them. On that axis the site offers very little, and the third-party lists that feed AI don't carry you at all.
A large first-party review library, per-provider review pages for Dr. Robert Najera, two owning physicians, and a marquee credential (official med spa of the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders). This is exactly the authority AI weighs heavily for medical topics — it just needs to be made machine-readable.
No LocalBusiness, MedicalBusiness, Service, or Physician markup could be confirmed on your pages. That's the layer engines trust most to extract who you are, what you treat, and where — without it you're guesswork.
No FAQPage schema. Answer engines pull candidacy, downtime, "does it hurt", and cost straight from FAQ markup. With none on your site, those answers get sourced from other Frisco clinics.
"How much is Botox at Atomic Beauty?" is one of the highest-intent buyer prompts there is — and an AI can't answer it because the number isn't in indexable text on your site.
No llms.txt (404), no AI-bot rules in robots.txt, and a Cloudflare layer that blocked every automated request we made. AI crawlers may be hitting the same wall — the cheapest, fastest fixes are all missing.
You're not on MedSpa Scout, ThreeBestRated, the Yelp Frisco top set, or the local roundups. When AI cites a "best med spa Frisco" source, it cites those — and they don't carry you.
For Frisco aesthetic queries, answer engines lean on sources they can parse cleanly: structured clinic sites, high review counts, and the "best med spa" lists. In the current rankings that means names like U Med Spa (1,000+ reviews), Beverly Hills Rejuvenation Center, Starwood Med Spa, Geneva Med Spa, and SkinChic — clinics that show up on the aggregators and give crawlers clean facts to lift. Atomic Beauty is at real risk of being left out of the answer entirely, even on questions where your reviews suggest you'd win — natural injectables and fair pricing.
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 real AEO and "compliance widget" vendors.
A 15-minute call. We'll show you the exact pages, schema, and questions to claim first — and where Frisco competitors are already ahead in AI answers.
Book a 15-minute AI visibility call