You can have the best SEO in your market and be spending $10K/month on Google Ads. But if your intake process leaks, you're building on sand.

The dirty secret of behavioral health marketing: most facilities convert less than 10% of their inbound inquiries into admissions. Here's where the other 90% goes — and exactly how to get it back.

Stopwatch ticking on a dark surface

The 5-Minute Rule (Most Facilities Break It)

Response time is the single biggest predictor of lead conversion — by a wide margin. Studies consistently show that leads contacted within 5 minutes convert at 9x the rate of leads contacted after 30 minutes.

Most treatment centers respond in hours, if at all. We've audited facilities spending $15K/month on ads that take 4–6 hours to return inquiries. That's not a marketing problem. That's an operations problem destroying your marketing ROI.

9x
Higher conversion rate — 5-minute response vs. 30-minute response Someone in crisis who fills out a form at 11pm and gets a call back at 9am the next morning has already called three other facilities.

The fix:

The Follow-Up Gap

Most facilities make 1–2 contact attempts before giving up. Research shows 80% of sales happen on the 5th–12th contact. In behavioral health, where ambivalence is part of the disease, this gap is even more costly.

Build a 14-day structured follow-up sequence and never let a lead fall through the cracks:

Day 0Immediate auto-response via SMS + email within 60 seconds
Day 0Live call attempt within 5 minutes — leave a warm voicemail if no answer
Day 1Second call attempt + second voicemail with a different angle
Day 2Email: "We can verify your insurance in 2 minutes — no commitment required"
Day 3SMS check-in: brief, human, no pressure
Day 5Email: "Still here for you" with educational resource + soft CTA
Day 7Final call attempt — this is your last high-effort touch
Day 10Long-term nurture email — share a client success story (anonymized)
Day 14"The door is always open" — low-pressure final email, move to monthly nurture

Most people who reach out to a treatment center are in crisis but ambivalent. A structured follow-up sequence treats that reality — instead of giving up after two unanswered calls.

Stethoscope and handwritten intake notes beside a laptop

Your Intake Form Is Probably Killing Conversions

Long intake forms feel thorough. To someone in crisis at 2 AM on their phone, they feel like a wall.

We've seen facilities with 12-field intake forms that ask for insurance ID numbers, employer information, and the name of their primary care physician — before a single human has spoken to the prospect. Every additional form field reduces completions by an estimated 5–10%.

Ask only what you need to qualify and contact the lead:

  1. First name
  2. Phone number
  3. Who needs help — themselves or a family member
  4. Insurance carrier (optional — offer to verify it for them)

Everything else gets captured on the intake call. Your goal with the form is one thing: get the phone number.

The After-Hours Black Hole

Over 40% of behavioral health inquiries come in between 8 PM and 8 AM. Most facilities have no live coverage during these hours — and their automated response is either generic or nonexistent.

This is a massive, fixable leak. Options to close it:

40–60%
Increase in contact rate for after-hours leads Facilities that deploy AI-assisted after-hours triage see this improvement within the first 30 days — before any change to their marketing spend.

The Math That Changes Everything

Here's a simple framing: if you're generating 100 leads/month and converting 8 into admissions, a 20% improvement in your conversion process (to 9.6 admissions) is worth more than a 20% increase in your marketing budget — and costs a fraction as much to achieve.

Fix the leak before you pour more water in. Most facilities have the leads. They just don't have the system to close them.